Plea seeks securing of digital evidence in Ram Temple case
Plea Seeks Securing of Digital Evidence in Ram Temple Case
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- A petition before the Supreme Court of India raises allegations of embezzlement of public donations meant for the construction of the Ram Temple (Ram Mandir) in Ayodhya. [S1]
- The central legal issue is preservation of volatile digital evidence — CCTV/DVR footage, QR-UPI payment logs, hundi registers, bank and vault records — before it is erased, overwritten, or corrupted. [S2]
- The case intersects constitutional access to justice, digital evidence law (Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023), and the accountability of a statutory trust managing public donations. [S3]
- Relevance for UPSC: tests knowledge of electronic evidence jurisprudence, SC vacation bench procedure, and governance of religious/charitable trusts.
2. Why in the News
- June 29–30, 2026: The Supreme Court's Vacation Bench (headed by Justice M.M. Sundresh) declined — for the second time during summer vacation — to urgently hear petitions seeking judicial intervention in the alleged Ram Temple donation embezzlement case. [S2]
- Petitioner-advocate N.K. Goswami made an unlisted oral mention before the Bench, warning that DVR systems, CCTV footage, QR-UPI logs, and bank records could be deleted or corrupted before the case is listed post-vacation (July 12, 2026). [S2]
- He sought a limited non-prejudicial preservation order, not a final hearing — framing postponement itself as a potential denial of justice. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
- 2019: The Supreme Court's landmark Ayodhya judgment (M. Siddiq v. Mahant Suresh Das) awarded the disputed 2.77-acre site to the Hindu side; directed the Centre to form a trust for temple construction. [S1]
- February 2020: Government constituted the Shri Ram Janmbhoomi Teerth Kshetra Trust (SRJBTKT) under the Societies Registration Act to manage construction and donations.
- January 22, 2024: Consecration (Pran Pratishtha) ceremony held; the temple opened to the public amid massive donation inflows via UPI, hundi, bank transfers, and cash.
- 2025–26: Allegations of financial irregularities in management of public donations surfaced; petitions filed in the SC by Advocates Ajay Kumar Rai and Dinesh Kumar Yadav, arraigning SRJBTKT, State of Uttar Pradesh, and Union of India as respondents. [S1]
- June 2026: Petitioner raises urgency of digital evidence preservation given SC's summer vacation schedule (ends July 12, 2026). [S2]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Court | Supreme Court of India (Vacation Bench) |
| Bench | Justice M.M. Sundresh (presiding) |
| Petitioners | Advocate N.K. Goswami; Advocates Ajay Kumar Rai & Dinesh Kumar Yadav [S1] |
| Respondents | Shri Ram Janmbhoomi Teerth Kshetra Trust; State of Uttar Pradesh; Union of India [S1] |
| Relief sought | Non-prejudicial preservation order for digital evidence |
| Trust constituted | February 2020, under Societies Registration Act |
| Summer vacation ends | July 12, 2026 [S2] |
| Electronic evidence law | Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA), 2023 (replaced Indian Evidence Act, 1872) [S3] |
| Key BSA provision | Electronic records admissible with hash value + expert certificate (replaced Section 65B framework) [S3] |
| Digital evidence types at risk | CCTV/DVR footage, QR-UPI logs, hundi registers, counting sheets, bank & vault records [S2] |
| IT Act, 2000 | Mandates intermediaries to preserve/retain data as per Central Government prescription [S3] |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 32 (right to constitutional remedies) is the gateway for such SC petitions; the "urgency" doctrine allows vacation benches to hear matters where delay causes irreversible harm. [S2]
- The Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 overhauled electronic evidence admissibility — now requires both a hash value (digital fingerprint to detect tampering) and expert certification; failure to preserve in original form can render evidence inadmissible. [S3]
- The SC has previously directed telecom companies and ISPs to segregate and maintain call-detail records securely during trial; the petition seeks analogous protection for temple financial records. [S3]
- A preservation order (as distinct from interim injunction) is a narrow, non-prejudicial relief that does not decide the merits — its denial risks permanent evidentiary loss.
Governance / Administrative
- The SRJBTKT manages massive public donations with limited statutory audit oversight comparable to government bodies — raising accountability gaps.
- Hundi (traditional donation box) collections are largely cash-based, making digital cross-verification with vault records critical for any audit.
- SC's refusal to treat the matter as urgent highlights the tension between judicial scheduling norms and time-sensitive digital evidence.
Technological / Scientific
- DVR systems automatically overwrite footage on a rolling cycle (typically 30–90 days); once overwritten, forensic recovery is near-impossible. [S2]
- QR-UPI transaction logs are stored by payment aggregators (NPCI ecosystem); without a preservation directive, logs may be purged per standard data retention policies.
- Hash-value certification under BSA, 2023 means investigators must capture the hash before any migration or modification — delay undermines chain of custody. [S3]
Ethical / Governance
- Public donations for a religious institution occupy a morally sensitive space; misappropriation, if proven, would constitute criminal breach of trust (IPC/BNS).
- The case raises the broader question of whether religious trusts receiving public funds should be subject to CAG audit or equivalent statutory oversight.
Historical
- Ayodhya has been a site of prolonged legal dispute (1950–2019); the post-judgment trust's financial governance is the newest legal chapter in a seven-decade judicial saga.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- January 22, 2024: Pran Pratishtha ceremony; large-scale donations received via multiple channels.
- 2025: Petitions filed in SC alleging dishonest misappropriation, diversion, and embezzlement of public donations; respondents include SRJBTKT, UP government, and Union of India. [S1]
- June 2026 (first instance): SC Vacation Bench declines urgent hearing for the first time during summer vacation.
- June 29, 2026: Petitioner N.K. Goswami makes unlisted oral mention; Vacation Bench (Justice M.M. Sundresh) again declines urgency; SC Registry informs that listing will occur post-July 12. [S2]
- June 30, 2026: The Hindu reports the hearing; petitioner's "DVR does not respect a listing schedule" argument draws attention to digital evidence volatility. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)
- The Vacation Bench that heard the oral mention on June 29, 2026 was headed by Justice M.M. Sundresh.
- The petitioner sought a non-prejudicial preservation order, not a final or interim injunction.
- The SC's summer vacation in 2026 ends on July 12, 2026.
- Shri Ram Janmbhoomi Teerth Kshetra Trust is constituted under the Societies Registration Act.
- The Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA), 2023 replaced the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, including the electronic evidence provisions formerly in Section 65B.
- Under BSA 2023, electronic records require both a hash value and expert certification for court admissibility.
- A DVR (Digital Video Recorder) typically overwrites footage on a rolling cycle, making timely preservation orders critical.
- QR-UPI logs fall under the NPCI (National Payments Corporation of India) ecosystem; their retention is governed by Central Government-prescribed norms under the IT Act, 2000.
- The SC has previously (before BSA) directed telecom companies to maintain call detail records in a segregated, secure manner when seized during investigation.
- The Information Technology Act, 2000 obligates intermediaries to preserve and retain data for durations and in formats prescribed by the Central Government.
- Allegations in the petition include dishonest misappropriation, diversion, and embezzlement of public donations for Ram Temple construction.
- The case was filed by advocates Ajay Kumar Rai and Dinesh Kumar Yadav; oral mention by advocate N.K. Goswami.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: GS-II (Governance, Judiciary); GS-III (Technology, Cybersecurity/Digital Evidence); GS-IV (Ethics in public institutions)
Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Structure, organization and functioning of the Judiciary; Transparency and accountability in governance - GS-III: Role of digital technology in law enforcement; Cybersecurity - GS-IV: Ethical issues in management of public/charitable institutions
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The volatility of digital evidence poses unique challenges to the Indian judicial process. Critically examine the legal framework under the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 for preservation and admissibility of electronic records." 2. "Religious trusts managing large-scale public donations occupy an ambiguous accountability space in India. Discuss the need for statutory audit oversight of such bodies in the context of the Ram Temple embezzlement allegations." 3. "Analyse the doctrine of non-prejudicial preservation orders in Indian constitutional law. When does judicial delay itself become a denial of justice?"
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 | Core legislation governing electronic evidence admissibility in the case |
| Ayodhya Verdict, 2019 (M. Siddiq v. Mahant Suresh Das) | Origin of SRJBTKT; provides background to trust's constitution and mandate |
| Information Technology Act, 2000 & IT (Amendment) Act, 2008 | Governs data retention, intermediary obligations, and digital evidence chain of custody |
| Supreme Court Vacation Bench procedure | Institutional context — when and how urgent matters are listed during court vacations |
| Charitable and Religious Trusts — regulatory framework | Societies Registration Act, public trust doctrine, state Endowment Acts |
| National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) & UPI architecture | Technical layer behind QR-UPI logs at the center of the preservation plea |
| CAG audit of autonomous bodies | Governance debate on whether religious trusts should face statutory audit |
| Digital Forensics and chain-of-custody rules | Scientific/investigative dimension of evidence preservation under Indian law |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing BSA 2023 with IEA 1872: Aspirants may cite Section 65B (Indian Evidence Act) — this provision is now subsumed in the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023; quote BSA for post-2023 legal analysis.
- Treating "preservation order" as "stay order": The petitioner explicitly sought a non-prejudicial preservation order (evidence security only), not a stay on Trust activities or interim injunction — a common conflation.
- Misattributing the Trust's constitution: SRJBTKT is constituted under the Societies Registration Act, NOT as a statutory body under a dedicated Parliamentary Act — its accountability regime differs accordingly.
- Confusing the Vacation Bench judge: The presiding judge was Justice M.M. Sundresh, not the CJI or a Constitution Bench — vacation bench compositions are frequently asked/confused.
- Overstating the SC's action: The Bench did not pass any order; it merely heard an oral mention and did not commit to urgent listing — aspirants should not write that the SC "stayed" or "ordered" anything in this matter.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Ram Temple Funds Embezzlement: Supreme Court Urged for Evidence" — https://thechenabtimes.com/2026/06/29/ram-temple-funds-embezzlement-supreme-court-urged-to-preserve-digital-evidence/ — (tier: 4)
- [S2] "Plea seeks securing of digital evidence in Ram Temple case" — The Hindu, June 30, 2026 (article excerpt supplied as primary source) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-30/ — (tier: 4)
- [S3] Search results on BSA 2023 / electronic evidence preservation law India (Supreme Court directions on hash value, Section 65B evolution, IT Act intermediary obligations) — synthesized from whitelisted legal commentary citing Supreme Court orders and BSA 2023 — (tier: 3/4)