Why in news?
The Gujarat Police have introduced NARIT‑AI (Narcotics Analysis & Retrieval Augmented Investigation Tool) to assist investigators in building stronger cases under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act. The system uses artificial intelligence to search legal documents and suggest investigative steps.
Background
Drug trafficking cases often falter due to procedural lapses or incomplete evidence. NARIT‑AI was conceptualised by Superintendent of Police Abhay Soni and developed by the state’s police Cyber Crime Division in partnership with Gradiante Creative Services. Development began in January 2026 and the tool was ready in about three months.
How it works
- Retrieval‑augmented generation: The system taps into a closed database of statutory provisions, police circulars and court judgments related to the NDPS Act. It retrieves relevant passages and uses a large language model to summarise them for the investigator.
- Structured investigation plans: Officers can input details of a case and receive a checklist of steps—such as search warrants, sample collection and forensic testing—to ensure legal compliance.
- Drafting and review: NARIT‑AI proposes drafts of panchnamas (witness statements), interrogation questions and chargesheets. It highlights potential weaknesses in the prosecution’s case and suggests counter‑arguments to anticipate defence strategies.
- Closed environment: To prevent hallucinations or leakage of sensitive data, the system does not access the open internet. Updates are deployed centrally when laws or court rulings change.
Significance
- Improving conviction rates: By standardising procedures and drawing on precedent, the tool helps investigators build cases that withstand judicial scrutiny.
- Capacity building: Junior officers with limited legal training receive guidance on complex provisions, reducing dependence on senior experts.
- Responsible AI use: The closed database mitigates risks of misinformation and upholds privacy, offering a model for other law‑enforcement applications.
Source: The Indian Express