Subject Matter Index

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Distinction between identification and recognition

Effect of failure to prove that an accused was the person who committed the offence

Forms of identification

Guiding principles for proper identification

Identification of an accused person as a question of fact

Meaning and components of identification

Meaning of identification

Need for the court to closely examine identification evidence where the case against an accused person substantially depends on the correctness of his identification

Need for the proper identification of an accused person in the offence of armed robbery

On what constitutes valid identification

Position of the law where the case against an accused person depends on the correctness of his identification

Position of the law where the identification of robbers is put in issue

What constitutes the best identification

When identification would be a relevant fact

Whether a direction that formal identification was not necessary in the case of the persons with previous acquaintance of the accused persons leads to substantial miscarriage of justice

Whether an accused person needs identification where he was arrested soon after the crime was committed

Whether identification can be done by voice

Whether identification of the accused person at the scene of the crime is better an than identification parade

whether or not an in-dock identification is admissible

Whether the identification by a witness would be rendered unreliable because the crime was committed in the dark

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