Supreme Court Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud 
Court

SC to examine right to be forgotten of accused after acquittal in criminal case

The Supreme Court agreed on Wednesday to examine an issue related to the right to be forgotten of an accused who seeks removal of judgments containing names from the public domain, saying this will have "serious ramifications".

New Delhi | The Supreme Court agreed on Wednesday to examine an issue related to the right to be forgotten of an accused who seeks removal of judgments containing names from the public domain, saying this will have "serious ramifications".

A bench comprising Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud also stayed a judgment of the Madras High Court that had asked a law portal to remove from its website a verdict that had acquitted a man in a rape case.

"The judgments are part of public records and the orders for their removal by the courts will have serious ramifications," the CJI said.

The bench said assuming that a person is acquitted, "how can the high court direct him (the law portal) to pull down the judgment? Once the judgment is delivered, it becomes part of the public record".

The court was hearing an appeal filed by the "India Kanoon" portal against a Madras High Court order that had asked it to remove the judgment from its website.

The high court's decision had come on a plea of one Karthick Theodore.

India clears procurement of 114 Rafale jets, other acquisition projects totalling Rs 3.6 lakh cr

Trade unions hold day-long strike; services likely to be partly affected

Trade union strike: Tharoor slams shutdown in Kerala, calls it 'organised tyranny'

LoP Satheesan calls for public debate on hartal culture; outlines UDF health sector reforms

SIT reaches Sabarimala for fresh sample collection in gold loss probe