In the case of Deepak Sharma v. State of Himachal Pradesh &Anr. (2026), the High Court granted regular bail to a petitioner who had been in custody for over two years and four months on charges including rape and voyeurism.
The following is a summary of the judgment:
Case Background
The petitioner was arrested in November 2023 following an FIR alleging that he committed “unwarranted acts” with the victim and made a video of these acts viral on social media. He was charged under Sections 376 (rape), 354C (voyeurism), and 506 (criminal intimidation) of the IPC, along with Section 67A of the Information Technology Act.
Key Findings of the Court
The Court decided to enlarge the petitioner on bail based on several legal and factual determinations:
- Evidence of a Consensual Relationship: The Court noted that the petitioner and the victim had been in a relationship since 2018, were Facebook friends, and were even engaged to be married in February 2023 before the engagement broke a few months later. The victim’s own medical history and depositions suggested a consensual relationship rather than rape.
- Breach of Promise vs. False Promise: The Court emphasized the established legal distinction between a “false promise to marry” (made with the intention to deceive from the start) and a “mere breach of promise” to marry due to unforeseen circumstances. The Court found that the facts at hand suggested a consensual affair where the promise to marry was in good faith but did not materialize, which does not attract the offense of rape.
- Procedural and Scientific Weaknesses: Forensic reports (RFSL) showed no detection of semen or blood in the samples. Furthermore, the prosecution failed to recover the URL link for the alleged viral video, making the charges under the IT Act and for voyeurism prima facie doubtful.
- Violation of Article 21: The Court reiterated that prolonged incarceration without the conclusion of a trial violates the fundamental right to liberty and a speedy trial under Article 21 of the Constitution. With 18 of the 25 witnesses already examined and the investigation complete, the Court held that continued detention would amount to pre-trial punishment.
- Bail is the Rule: The judgment reaffirmed the principle that “bail is the rule and jail is the exception”. Since the petitioner had deep roots in society and there was no evidence he would flee or tamper with witnesses, his continued detention was deemed unnecessary.
Conclusion
The High Court concluded that the prosecution’s story was “highly doubtful and improbable” at the prima facie stage. The Court allowed the bail petition, directing the petitioner’s release on a personal bond of ₹50,000 with two sureties. The release was subject to stringent conditions, including a mandate that the petitioner not contact the victim and report to the police once a month for updates on his conduct.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 143
Deepak Sharma V. State Of Himachal Pradesh &Anr.(D.O.J. 23-04-2026)
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