Speed Post News Network
Patna: Bihar Entrepreneurs Association (BEA) organized a day long National Forensic Conference for the first time ever in Bihar at Adhiveshan Bhawan on Old Secretariat premises here on January 24, 2019. The conference was addressed by forensic experts who specialise in Handwriting Examination, Document Verification, Employee Background Verification, Forensic Training & Workshops, Fingerprint Matching & Verification, Cyber Forensic and Due Diligence besides Private Investigations. They were brought over to the state by BEA.
Bihar Deputy CM Sushil Kumar Modi (SuMo) and PHED Minister Vinod Narayan Jha graced the national conference that was attended by a galaxy of top-notch investigation experts and crime control authorities besides law students from Chanakya National Law University.
Former Bihar DGP Abhayanand, Commandant, ITBP Bihar HQ, RN Gangoli, Deputy Commandant Bihar Zone, SSB, PN Chaurasiya, Narcotics Control Bureau Superintendent, K V Robinson Gangte, Green Shelter Founder Abhijeet Narayan, and Director, Health, BEA, Amitesh Anand, were amongst others present on the occasion.
Addressing the conference, Deputy CM Sushil Kumar Modi went down the memory lanes recalling how his fingerprints and footmarks were taken by Mumbai police back in 1973 for a mere violation of section 144 of CrPC. Modi said mastering technology is the key to success in contemporary market. Applauding the BEA for making possible the influx of New Age technology and opportunities of skill development in the state, Modi said improvement is a continuous process and added that the cycle should continue.
BEA Secretary General, Abhishek Singh, in his address, deliberated upon the importance of technology in the present context. He said BEA has fixed objective targets in all its endeavours; skill development of youth and effective crime control are prime objectives this time.
Speaking on the occasion, PHED Minister Jha deliberated on the necessity of forensic sciences in tightening the noose on those violating the law. He said precise evidence collection and subsequent timely trial can make law a deterrent.