Pune “Porsche crash” accused completed a driving course as directed by the court

The juvenile who has been charged of killing two IT professionals on May 19 in Pune by smashing his Porsche into a motorcycle while intoxicated has finished the court-mandated 15-day safe driving course.

Two IT professionals on May 19 Succumbed to death after being hit by a Porsche in Pune 

Aneesh Awadhiya and Ashwini Koshta, two Madhya Pradesh residents, were thrown into the air and fell on parked cars. While the other one passed away while receiving treatment, the first one died instantly.

He was ordered to prepare a 300-word essay on traffic accidents and obtain traffic law and regulation guidance from the regional transport office as part of the conditions of his bail set by the Juvenile Justice Board.

“The minor offender finished the RTO’s safe driving course. According to the court’s rules, the procedure was kept under wraps since it might have raised concerns about the juvenile’s privacy, a senior RTO official was quoted by PTI.

The incident that occurred in Pune’s Kalyani Nagar had caused widespread anger, in part because the accused was given lenient bail by the Juvenile Justice Board. Additionally, a police inquiry had revealed attempts by the accused’s family and certain doctors to conceal the crime.

The representative added that the training program included instruction on road safety precautions, the value of a driver’s license, the interpretation of traffic signs and symbols, and other relevant topics.

The officer said that as part of the procedure, the juvenile also received on-field training. The 300-word essay has already been handed in by the minor.

Seven people, including the parents of the juvenile are listed on the chargesheet that the police have filed. On July 25, the 900-page chargesheet was delivered to a Pune court. It did not, however, include the seventeen-year-old kid, whose case is being handled by the Juvenile Justice Board (JJB) independently.

The boy’s parents, and two physicians from Sassoon General Hospital, Ajay Taware and Dr. Shrihari Halnor, are accused of exchanging the boy’s blood samples with his mother’s following the car accident.

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