Friday, June 17, 2011

Indian teenager hounded in NY on false charges – ToI – 26.5.11

Govt Backs Her Claim Of $1.5m In Damages

TNN & AGENCIES


New York/New Delhi: The Indian government on Wednesday came out in full support of 18-year-old Krittika Biswas, daughter of an Indian diplomat, after she sued the New York city government for $1.5 million for being arrested on false charges, handcuffed and confined with criminals.
    Her harrowing experience began after she was accused of sending anti-semitic emails to her teachers in December 2010 — a charge she repeatedly denied. She was arrested on February 8 and kept in jail for 24 hours before the Indian consulate and the embassy in Washington swung into action to secure her release.
    Thereafter, despite the Queens district attorney dropping the charges and expunging her arrest from the record, school officials sent Krittika to a suspension centre.
    There, she told Times Now, she was treated like a criminal and forced to spend time with “HIV patients and sexworkers”. Her arrest and confinement have raised questions of racial bias in the New York police as well as the school authorities.
    On Wednesday, lawyer Ravi Batra said Krittika, whose father Debashish Biswas is vicecounsel at the Indian consulate here, has sued the New York City government claiming $1.5 million in damages. Indian consulate general Prabhu Dayal said Krittika deserved the compensation from the US government as “she has undergone mental and physical torture. This has scarred her mind for the rest of he life.” ‘US cops coerced me to confess’
New York/New Delhi: Taking serious note of harrowing experience of the daughter of a Indian diplomat in US prison, the Union government has decided to extend all logistical support to the victim to pursue her acse.
    Official sources in the Ministry of External Affairs told TOI, "We have taken this issue up with the US government. We have conveyed our anguish at the incident." They even said that the school's decision to not charge the real culprit, an "Asian" boy, spoke volumes of their "double standards".
    The teenager told Times Now that when she told the cops to contact the Indian consulate, they asked her, "Are you a diplomat?" She alleged that she was not allowed to use the bathroom when she was in custody at the 107th precinct. "Eventually, I had to go in front of everyone," she said, referring to a small toilet in the cell occupied by other people.
    Batra said that her more than 24-hour arrest violated international, federal, state and city laws. Batra said neither Krittika's father nor the consulate general were informed of her arrest on February 8.
    "They (the school) based my arrest on basically nothing," Krittika said, adding that the school did not suspend the Chinese student who sent the emails. "I don't know why he wasn't arrested... the principal pushed for my arrest."
    She said a cop told her that if she didn't confess, she would have to spend time in prison with prostitutes and people with HIV. She couldn't drink water from a water fountain because it had another person's vomit, and although it was really cold, she could not use the blanket because it stank.
    The New York Police Department is not responding to calls and an email seeking a response.
    Dayal later said that the incident would have no bearing on Indo-US relations. "This is an aberration... a wrongful act of local officials," he said. In addition to compensatory and punitive damages, Batra suggested that Mayor Bloomberg could perhaps give "a key to the City to Krittika as a token of heartfelt sorrow for the unbecoming pain inflicted upon her."
Parents hired experts to prove her innocence
    The parents of Krittika Biswas had engaged an independent cyber-forensics expert in New York who concluded that the teenager had not sent the offending emails. In December last, the John Browne HS Senior authorities said, two of their teachers, Kim Ross and Ivan Cohill, received obscene and threatening emails in a case of cyber-bullying. On December 21, the school identified two students, Krittika and Aman, for interview. Both teachers taught them, and they lived in the same building and the IP address of the two threatening emails also came from that building, according to the officials. On December 22, their parents were summoned to school and told that because Krittika knew "French'', and a part of the offensive e-mails were in that language, she was the main target and that this was now a police matter. On February 8, Krittika was summoned and informed that additional emails were received on February 6. Her lawyer said Krittika was also targeted because of her posts on her Facebook page. When the family engaged cyber experts, they found that Krittika was in a mall when one of the emails was sent from her IP address. Security cameras proved that Krittika was in a mall when one of the emails was sent. The school dropped all charges against Krittika, but they did not disclose that they had found the real culprit, her lawyer added. TNN

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