
Khadse Land Case: CBI Probe, Court Hearings, and More – Full Story on puneripages.in.
By Prashant for PuneriPages.in
When I first read the details, I had to take a moment. We’re talking about over 1400 obscene images and possibly 350 women affected. That’s not just a number on a police report—those are real people, real lives, real trauma. And what makes it even heavier is that the person accused is Girish Choudhari, a businessman and son-in-law of senior NCP leader Eknath Khadse. That political connection adds a whole new layer to how this case could play out.
So here’s what we know:
Table of Contents
The Accused:
Girish Choudhari.
The Charges:
Possession and circulation of obscene material, possible digital exploitation, maybe even voyeurism.
The Scale:
Over 1400 images. Around 350 potential victims.
The Action:
Maharashtra State Women’s Commission Chairperson Rupali Chakankar has officially stepped in. She’s not just observing from the sidelines—she’s called for urgent police intervention.
In her words, “We cannot ignore the scale of this case.” And honestly, she’s right. This isn’t something we can allow to be swept under the rug just because there are political connections involved. If even a fraction of the claims are true, it could be one of the most disturbing exploitation cases we’ve heard in recent times.
Chakankar’s involvement is crucial. The State Women’s Commission exists to protect women when the system fails them, and right now, this is the kind of moment that tests whether our institutions will actually deliver justice.
Of course, the political side of this is making waves too. Girish Choudhari being Khadse’s son-in-law means this case is not just legal anymore—it’s political. But Rupali Chakankar made it clear: the real priority here should be the victims. Not reputations. Not damage control.
Where does it stand now?
Police are looking into the digital evidence. They’re taking statements. They’re checking the authenticity of those photos. No official word yet from Khadse or his family, but something may come soon. A lot of eyes are watching.
As someone following this closely, I can say this: there’s a fine line between justice and cover-up when power and politics are involved. But every time we let something like this slide, we fail the very people we claim to protect.
Let’s not make that mistake again.
We’ll keep covering this—truthfully, sensitively, and with every ounce of humanity it deserves. Because behind every headline, there are victims waiting for justice.
Stay aware. Stay loud.