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Firm supplying drone to defence forces claims data theft; K'taka HC orders probe

IANS April 28, 2025 178 views

The Karnataka High Court has ordered a Special Investigation Team to probe data theft allegations by a drone manufacturing company supplying to Indian defence forces. The firm claims former employees stole critical technological information and shared it with another company. The court expressed serious concerns about the low rate of cybercrime investigations and lack of investigative expertise. The three-member SIT, led by a senior IPS officer, must complete the investigation within three months.

"Not because the accused are not guilty, it is because the investigating officers are not equipped" - Karnataka High Court Bench"
Bengaluru, April 28: The Karnataka High Court bench headed by Justice M. Nagaprasanna has ordered a probe by the Special Investigation Team (SIT) into the charge of data theft and cyber-espionage made by the Newspace Research and Technologies Private Limited.

Key Points

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Karnataka HC orders three-month probe into drone firm's cyber espionage claim

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Special Investigation Team to examine defence technology data theft

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SIT led by senior IPS officer Pranab Mohanty

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Cyber crime investigation challenges highlighted by court

The bench passed the order constituting the SIT while considering the petition in this regard by the private firm. The bench further noted while passing the order that the charges alleged is connected to the national defence and military technology.

The bench has constituted a three-member SIT team. Pranab Mohanty, senior IPS officer, who heads the Cyber Command Unit and also heads Cyber Crime and Narcotics Division in the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), will head the SIT which also includes and IPS officers Bhushan Gulab Rao Borase and Nisha James.

The bench has asked the SIT to complete the probe within three months and submit the report.

The firm is involved in manufacturing of drones for the Indian Army, Navy and Air Force. It also manufactures for the organisations such as the Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO) and other important agencies.

The firm submitted that some of the former employees of the company have stolen the data such as sourced codes, designs and defence technologies of the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UVA) and used it to benefit another company.

The firm in the petition claimed that even as the police complaint was registered and despite judicial orders, the probe has not progressed.

The bench after the submission raised concern over cyber crimes and slow investigation. The court has also raised its concern over the lack of skill among the policemen to look into cases involving intricate matters such as data theft and others.

The bench stated that the rate of filing of chargesheet over new age crimes is only 8 per cent. "Not because the accused are not guilty, it is because the investigating officers are not equipped to bring those accused to book. This is due to lack of expertise," the bench noted.

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is serious stuff! If defense tech is being stolen, it's a major national security risk. Glad the HC is taking swift action. Hope the SIT has real cyber experts and not just regular cops.
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Priya M.
The 8% chargesheet rate is shocking 😳 We really need to invest in training our police for cyber crimes. This isn't the 90s anymore!
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Amit S.
While the concern is valid, I wonder if the company itself had proper data security protocols. Defense contractors should have military-grade cybersecurity as standard practice.
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Neha T.
Three months seems like a tight deadline for such a complex investigation. Hope they don't rush it and miss important details. National security can't afford mistakes.
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Vikram J.
The fact that former employees did this is extra concerning. Need better vetting and non-compete clauses in defense sector hiring. 🚨
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Sneha R.
Good to see women officers like Nisha James being part of this important SIT team. Representation matters in all sectors, including cyber investigations!

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