Some time ago, my son was summoned by traffic police, which made him sign the FIR."I was told to sign the FIR which said that my son was responsible for his own death because he was speeding.The stray cows suddenly appeared on the road and my son did not have any time to react.:Patel's father, Mahesh told TOI

Sanjay
Patel, 28, died after two cows suddenly came in the way of his motorcycle on an
Ahmedabad highway last September - the collision hemorrhaged Patel's brain. Yet
the city's traffic cops have made Patel's father file an FIR against his own
deceased son, under section 279 of the IPC, which affirms that 'rash driving'
was responsible for his death.
Patel,
a resident of Kalol, worked at a car dealership. The accident occurred near
Chharodi on SG Road. The traffic department's deputy commissioner of police (administration),
Tejas Patel, said: "Across the 14 traffic police stations in the city, not
a single case has been registered under provisions of accidental death."
He said so far only FIRs under various sections of road accidents have been registered.
Patel's
death is a fit case for investigation under accidental death provisions because
authorities have been cracking down on people whose cattle stray onto roads and
put commuters in peril.

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'Cattle
owners unpunished'
Sanjay
Patel's father, Mahesh, told TOI that some time ago, he was summoned by
A-Division traffic police, which made him sign the FIR."I was told to sign
the FIR which said that my son was responsible for his own death because he was
speeding," Mahesh Patel said. "The stray cows suddenly appeared on
the road and my son did not have any time to react. Isn't it strange that
instead of punishing cattle owners who let their animals stray, my dead son was
blamed?"
DCP
Tejas Patel, however, said it would be hard for police to trace the owners of
animals responsible for such accidents. "Earlier, only three traffic
police stations were authorized to register road-accident FIRs but now all 14
can do so," Tejas Patel said. Moreover, police put down such instances to
bad luck. "It is unfortunate that such things happen," said joint
commissioner of police J R Muthaliya. "We will look into the issue and see
how proper action can be taken against the accused."

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Last
year, the Gujarat high court had pulled up the Ahmedabad municipal commissioner
and the city police commissioner for not taking punitive measures against
owners of cattle that dangerously sauntered through the city. Last year, two
cattle owners were booked for allowing their animals to trespass on public
roads.
At
the time of his death, Patel had been married for a year and seven months. He
is survived by his wife Anita, who is pursuing the BCom course as an external
student in Mehsana.
ACP
to be cattle squad's security officer
Police
have deputed an assistant commissioner of police as the security officer for
the civic body's cattle squad, which captures stray cattle. "Traffic
police and local police also provide security to the squad," Tejas Patel
said-TOI
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