BITTU @ KALA vs STATE OF HARYANA — CRM-M/32338/2026

Disposed: --ALLOWED on 05th June 2026.

Case disposed

CNR: PHHC010927702026

Filing Number

CRM-M/43814/2026

Filing Date

25-May-2026

Registration No

CRM-M/32338/2026

Registration Date

29-May-2026

Judge

Mr. Justice Rajesh Bhardwaj

Coram

Mr. Justice Rajesh Bhardwaj

Bench Type

Single

Category

99 ( 945 )

Sub-Category

40.2 - REGULAR BAIL (HARYANA) ( 219 )

Judicial Branch

CRIMINAL BRANCH

Decision Date

05-Jun-2026

Nature of Disposal

--ALLOWED

Last updated 06-Jun-2026

Petitioner(s)

  1. 1.BITTU @ KALA

    Adv. MOHIT RATHEE

  2. 2.STATE OF HARYANA

Respondent(s)

  1. 1.STATE OF HARYANA

  2. 2.STATE OF HARYANA

Case History

  1. Case disposedDisposed

  2. 05-Jun-2026

    Mr. Justice Rajesh BhardwajView PDF

    The High Court of Punjab and Haryana granted regular bail to Bittu @ Kala in a murder case (FIR No. 150) involving the death of Om Kaur, primarily due to the petitioner's prolonged incarceration of approximately 3 years 11 months and the slow progress of trial with only 3 of 49 prosecution witnesses examined. The court relied on Supreme Court precedent affirming that deprivation of personal liberty without ensuring speedy trial violates Article 21 of the Constitution, holding that an accused has a fundamental right to speedy trial regardless of crime severity. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.

  3. 25-May-2026

    Case filed

    Registration No. CRM-M/32338/2026

casestatus.in Summary

The High Court of Punjab and Haryana granted regular bail to Bittu @ Kala in a murder case (FIR No. 150) involving the death of Om Kaur, primarily due to the petitioner's prolonged incarceration of approximately 3 years 11 months and the slow progress of trial with only 3 of 49 prosecution witnesses examined. The court relied on Supreme Court precedent affirming that deprivation of personal liberty without ensuring speedy trial violates Article 21 of the Constitution, holding that an accused has a fundamental right to speedy trial regardless of crime severity. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.

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