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    <title>2002 (10) TMI 787 - Supreme Court</title>
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    <description>Credible and consistent testimony of injured and eyewitness witnesses can sustain a prosecution case even without independent witnesses, where the evidence contains no material contradictions. First-time identification in court is not unreliable merely because no test identification parade was held if the accused were already known to the witnesses and their names appeared in the FIR. The absence of ballistic evidence or a weapon-to-cartridge linkage does not by itself create doubt where the remaining evidence is trustworthy. On that basis, the conviction and sentence were left undisturbed.</description>
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      <description>Credible and consistent testimony of injured and eyewitness witnesses can sustain a prosecution case even without independent witnesses, where the evidence contains no material contradictions. First-time identification in court is not unreliable merely because no test identification parade was held if the accused were already known to the witnesses and their names appeared in the FIR. The absence of ballistic evidence or a weapon-to-cartridge linkage does not by itself create doubt where the remaining evidence is trustworthy. On that basis, the conviction and sentence were left undisturbed.</description>
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