CJI Surya Kant Honors CBI Founder DP Kohli, Flags Cybercrime Challenge

Chief Justice of India Surya Kant delivered the DP Kohli Memorial Lecture, honoring the founding Director of the CBI as a visionary institution-builder. He emphasized that Kohli established the agency on principles of professionalism, independence, and public trust. The CJI acknowledged the CBI's evolution into a nationally significant body handling sensitive cases at the intersection of law and governance. He also highlighted a key paradox in fighting cybercrime, where perpetrators operate in an integrated manner but institutional responses remain fragmented.

Key Points: CJI Pays Tribute to CBI Founder DP Kohli, Discusses Agency's Role

  • Tribute to CBI founding Director DP Kohli
  • CBI's foundation built on credibility and trust
  • Agency handles complex national cases
  • Cybercrime fight hampered by fragmented response
3 min read

CJI Surya Kant pays tribute to DP Kohli, highlights CBI's evolving role and challenges in tackling cybercrime

CJI Surya Kant honored CBI founder DP Kohli's legacy and highlighted the agency's evolution and challenges in tackling fragmented cybercrime responses.

"He was not merely an administrator. He was an institution and an institutional titan. - CJI Surya Kant"

New Delhi, April 21

Chief Justice of India Surya Kant paid tribute to the legacy of DP Kohli, describing him as a visionary who laid the foundation of India's premier investigative agency in the 22nd DP Kohli Memorial Lecture at Bharat Mandapam on Monday.

DP Kohli became the founding Director of CBI upon its establishment on 1st April 1963, serving until his retirement in 1968.

Addressing the gathering, he said, "It is both my proud privilege and profound pleasure to pay tribute to a visionary public servant, a man whose ethos and pacificacity shaped the very foundations of our nation's premier investigating agency... He was not merely an administrator. He was an institution and an institutional titan."

Highlighting Kohli's approach to institution-building, the CJI stated, "At a time when India was still shaping its governance structure, he spearheaded an investigating body that would be defined not by power but by credibility. His philosophy was simple, yet revelatory, that the legitimacy of an institution rests not in the authority it wields, but in the trust it inspires."

He further underscored the principles guiding the agency's formation.

"Under his stewardship, the foundations of CBI were laid with an emphasis on professionalism, independence and integrity... He understood that in a democratic society, the investigative process must command public confidence and that confidence must be earned through consistency, impartiality, and competence..."

Chief Justice of India Surya Kant further said that the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has evolved into an institution of national significance, handling complex and sensitive cases under intense public scrutiny. He noted that the agency plays a unique role at the intersection of law enforcement, governance, and accountability, with a mandate covering corruption, economic offences, and serious crimes, while navigating legal challenges and institutional expectations.

"Over the decades, the CBI has grown into an institution of National significance. It has handled some of the most complex and sensitive investigations in the country, often under intense public scrutiny. Its work has not only shaped legal outcomes but has also influenced public perceptions of justice. In that sense, CBI occupies a unique position in India's investigative framework. It operates at the intersection of law enforcement, governance, and public accountability. Its mandate spans corruption, economic offences, and serious crimes with national and international dimensions. In each of these domains, it has been called upon to navigate not just legal complexities, but also institutional expectations," he said.

CJI Surya Kant also highlighted a key challenge in tackling cybercrime, noting that while offenders operate in an integrated manner, the institutional response often remains fragmented.

He said the cybercrime response ecosystem involves multiple stakeholders, including banks and financial institutions, telecom and internet service providers, social media platforms, and law enforcement agencies such as the Central Bureau of Investigation, which handle complex investigations.

"One of the most striking paradoxes in the fight against cybercrime is this: while the perpetrators operate as integrated enterprises, the institutional response often remains fragmented and sequential..The ecosystem involved in responding to cybercrime is vast and complex. Banks and Financial Institutions act as custodians of transactional integrity. Telecommunications providers and Internet Service Platforms serve as conduits of communication. Social Media Platforms facilitate interaction at scale. Law enforcement agencies such as the CBI investigate and undertake complex, multi-layered inquiries," he added.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The CJI's point about the fragmented response to cybercrime is spot on. We need better integration between banks, telcos, and agencies like CBI. Victims often get passed from one desk to another. Streamlining this process should be a top priority.
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Vikram M
Respectfully, while we honor the founder, the current CBI needs introspection. The "public confidence" CJI mentioned is often missing. Too many high-profile cases get stuck in political crossfire. The institution must be shielded from external pressures to truly serve justice.
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Priyanka N
My father worked in a government department and always spoke highly of the CBI's professionalism in the older days. Kohli sahab built a great foundation. Hope the agency can tackle modern challenges like crypto scams and online fraud with the same ethos. Jai Hind!
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Robert G
Interesting to see the head of the judiciary speaking on investigative agencies. This kind of discourse is healthy for any democracy. The cybercrime coordination issue is a global problem, not just India's.
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Nisha Z
"Trust it inspires" – such powerful words. When a common person like me hears "CBI has taken over the case", we feel a sense of hope. That's the legacy. Now they need to upgrade skills fast to handle digital evidence and dark web crimes. More training budgets please!

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