In India’s high-profile luxury car crashes, a recurring defence emerges: a hired driver was at the wheel. Investigations often uncover conflicting claims, with authorities relying on CCTV, eyewitnesses, and forensic evidence to establish the true driver. This pattern highlights the challenges in determining responsibility and the vulnerability of drivers in such cases. In India’s high-profile luxury car crashes, a recurring defence emerges: a hired driver was at the wheel. Investigations often uncover conflicting claims, with authorities relying on CCTV, eyewitnesses, and forensic evidence to establish the true driver. This pattern highlights the challenges in determining responsibility and the vulnerability of drivers in such cases.
Trending
- Rahul Gandhi appears before Bhiwandi court in defamation case
- Pakistan poverty explodes, inequality at 27-year high as economic crisis deepens
- Ajit Pawar plane crash: Rohit Pawar writes to PM Modi, demands Aviation minister’s resignation
- ‘He covered for us all year, now it’s our turn’: SKY backs Abhishek after three ducks
- Trump slams US Supreme Court over ‘foreign sway,’ targets India-linked firms & attorneys
- AI Impact Summit declaration secures support of 86 nations, 2 global bodies: Vaishnaw
- Perplexity seems to have joined Anthropic in ‘trolling’ Sam Altman
- ‘Aap har venue mein pahunch jaate ho’: Gambhir’s exchange with fan goes viral – Wach
