PROCURING DIGITAL EVIDENCE AND THE METAPHOR PROBLEM: ASSESSMENT OF INDIA IN COMPARISON TO USA, CANADA AND UK
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NLU Jodhpur
Abstract
Search and Seizure are a part and parcel of investigations, and the State has
legitimate interest in detecting and preventing crimes. Such powers during
investigations enable the law enforcement to effectively produce evidence for
prosecution and obtain convictions. The development of technology, however, has
disrupted this seemingly seamless process of investigation. This is mainly
because digital evidence is inherently different from traditional documentary
evidence. This fundamental difference demands a deviation from traditional
conceptions of privacy and the need to conceptualise new developments such as
reasonable expectations of one’s anonymity and control of customer information
vis-à-vis a third party and many other implications on privacy that digital
evidence presents. Instances in which the State could obtain data and the
criminal procedure applicable would determine whether such intrusion would be
reasonable intrusion or not. India’s jurisprudence on privacy itself is still in the
stage of its infancy. Therefore, it is relevant and necessary to ascertain and
analyse how other jurisdictions such as USA, Canada and the UK have
conceptualised privacy in light of these new developments and managed to
balance the competing rights of an individual and the legitimate state interest.
This paper aims to ascertain the effectiveness and the shortcomings of the
existing procedure in India to procure digital evidence in comparison to the
principles and procedure existing in USA, Canada and UK.
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NLUJ LAW REVIEW (2021)
