Who is ultimately responsible for the killing of 76 security personnel in the 2010 Tadmetla attack? That question has once again come into focus after the Chhattisgarh High Court acquitted 10 accused in the case, citing a lack of credible and legally admissible evidence nearly 16 years after one of India’s deadliest Maoist ambushes. The judgment has reopened a long-standing debate over investigative failures, prosecution weaknesses, and whether justice has truly been delivered for the families of the slain personnel.
The incident, known as the Tadmetla attack, took place on April 6, 2010, in the dense forests of Sukma district, Chhattisgarh. A team of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and state police was engaged in routine area domination patrol when they were ambushed by Maoists. The attackers opened heavy fire and used explosives in a carefully planned assault, killing 76 personnel, 75 CRPF jawans and one state police officer. The insurgents also looted weapons and escaped after planting improvised explosive devices in the area.
The case that followed became one of the most closely watched Naxal-related trials in India. Initially, 10 individuals were charged in connection with the attack. However, the legal process stretched over more than a decade, and significant evidentiary gaps began to surface during judicial scrutiny.
On May 5, 2026, a division bench of the Chhattisgarh High Court comprising Chief Justice Ramesh Sinha and Justice Ravindra Agrawal upheld the earlier acquittal by a trial court (2013), dismissing the state government’s appeal under Section 378 of the CrPC. The High Court observed that the prosecution had failed to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and had not produced credible evidence linking the accused to the attack.
The court’s findings highlighted several major deficiencies in the investigation. First, there were no eyewitnesses who could directly identify the accused as participants in the ambush. Despite the scale of the attack, no test identification parade was conducted, weakening the prosecution’s ability to establish identity.
Second, the court found that alleged confessional statements attributed to the accused could not be treated as reliable evidence in the absence of corroboration. In criminal law, such statements require strong supporting material, which was missing in this case.
Third, although explosives and weapons were recovered from the attack site, the prosecution failed to connect these materials to the accused individuals. Crucially, forensic science laboratory reports were either not properly submitted or not relied upon in a manner that could establish ownership or use by the accused.
Fourth, procedural lapses were also noted. The court pointed out that mandatory sanctions required under provisions of the Arms Act were not placed on record. Additionally, contradictions in witness testimonies further weakened the prosecution’s case, creating doubts about reliability. Fifth, and most significantly, the court concluded that the prosecution had failed to prove any direct involvement of the accused in planting, handling, or using explosives during the ambush. Without this linkage, the chain of circumstantial evidence remained incomplete.
The High Court also expressed concern over the quality of the investigation in a case involving such a grave national security incident. It was observed that if investigative agencies continue to handle serious offences with such procedural and evidentiary lapses, public confidence in the criminal justice system could be seriously undermined.
From the perspective of the prosecution, the case relied heavily on circumstantial evidence rather than direct proof, a factor that ultimately proved insufficient in court. Over time, witness reliability weakened, forensic gaps remained unresolved, and critical procedural requirements were not fulfilled.
The acquittal has now raised uncomfortable questions: If the accused are not proven guilty in court, then who exactly carried out one of the deadliest attacks on security forces in India’s history? And if the investigation failed to establish the truth, does it reflect a deeper systemic breakdown in handling insurgency-related cases?
For the families of the 76 personnel who lost their lives, the judgment brings renewed pain and uncertainty. While the attack itself remains undisputed, the inability of the justice system to conclusively identify and convict the perpetrators has left a void between sacrifice and accountability.
More than a decade and a half later, the Tadmetla case stands as a reminder of both the brutality of the Maoist insurgency and the challenges faced by India’s investigative and prosecuting agencies in translating complex security operations into legally sustainable convictions.


















