A 14-year-old boy was sent by a juvenile court for shooting at Paragon and neither parent applied for release.

Central Juvenile and Family Court orders extradition of 14-year-old boy accused of shooting at Paragon. Apply for temporary release without a parent entering the observation center

(4 October 2023) The investigating officer produced the petitioner, a 14-year-old boy, before the Central Juvenile and Family Court. A request to verify an arrest is ready to be submitted within 24 hours of the arrest as per the Juvenile and Family Court Act. and Juvenile and Family Court Procedures 2010

The arrested person has been interrogated by the Central Juvenile and Family Court. It is ordered that the Court has considered the facts from the examination of the petitioner and perusal of the documents of the petitioner. The accused must be found to be the actual perpetrator of the crime. An arresting police officer who finds an offender while committing an offense and arrests him is a flagrant offence. The arrest was lawful. And there is no fact that the actions of the police officers were illegal.

For asking the court to refer the accused to a psychiatrist at the Kanlayana Rajanagarindra Institute. The investigating officer did not bring the consulting doctor to the court for treatment until the accused contested the case. Or an investigation can determine whether the accused is truly mentally ill.

So the facts are therefore not yet settled. Accused is mentally ill. And because the activities of the accused may pose a serious threat to others, it was considered appropriate to send him to the Juvenile Watch and Protection Centre. And a monitoring center should provide an examination of the state of mind of the accused. Give an injunction if there is no insurance.

It doesn’t look like that today. The parents applied for the youth’s temporary release, but the authorities sent the youth to the observation center. As per court order

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