Karnataka exonerates 3 IPS officers in Chinnaswamy stampede that killed 11
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Karnataka government on Tuesday, 15 July 2026, formally exonerated three senior Indian Police Service (IPS) officers — B. Dayananda, Vikash Kumar Vikash, and Shekhar H. Tekkannavar — in connection with the Chinnaswamy Stadium stampede of 4 June 2025, which claimed 11 lives and left at least 56 people injured. The move brings to a close departmental proceedings initiated against the officers under the All India Services (Discipline and Appeal) Rules, 1969.
What the Government Orders Say
Separate orders issued by the Department of Personnel and Administrative Reforms (Services-IV) confirmed that disciplinary proceedings initiated under Rule 8(4) of the AIS (D&A) Rules have been closed. The competent authority, after examining each officer's statement of defence and the opinion of the Administrative Department, found no grounds to continue the proceedings.
The order pertaining to Dayananda stated: 'The Departmental Enquiry Proceedings initiated against Sri B. Dayananda, IPS (KN:1994), under Rule 8(4) of AIS (D&A) Rules are hereby closed, and the officer is exonerated of the charges levelled against him.' A comparable order was issued for Tekkannavar, though it carried an additional warning advising him 'to act responsibly to ensure that such incidents shall not recur in the future.'
Who the Officers Are and Their Earlier Suspensions
B. Dayananda, a 1994-batch IPS officer, was serving as Additional Director General of Police and Commissioner of Police, Bengaluru City, at the time of the incident. Shekhar H. Tekkannavar, a 2014-batch IPS officer, was then Deputy Commissioner of Police (Central Division), Bengaluru City. Both were suspended on 5 June 2025, a day after the tragedy.
Vikash Kumar Vikash, a 2004-batch IPS officer serving as Inspector General of Police and Additional Commissioner of Police (West), Bengaluru City, was also placed under suspension on 5 June 2025. Though all three suspensions were subsequently revoked, departmental inquiries continued. Show-cause notices and articles of charge were served on 31 July 2025, and the officers submitted their replies denying all allegations on 8 September 2025.
The Chinnaswamy Stampede: What Happened
The tragedy unfolded outside Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bengaluru on 4 June 2025, during a felicitation ceremony marking Royal Challengers Bengaluru's (RCB) maiden IPL title victory. An estimated 2.5 lakh people converged around the venue, overwhelming security and crowd-management arrangements. The crowd crush near multiple stadium gates killed 11 people — six men and five women — and injured at least 56 others, according to official figures.
The incident triggered widespread public outrage over failures in crowd control and event planning, prompting multiple inquiries, suspensions of senior police officers, and legal proceedings against event organisers and government officials.
Next Steps and Administrative Closure
Copies of the exoneration orders dated 14 July 2026 have been forwarded to the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Department of Personnel and Training, the Karnataka Home Department, and other concerned authorities, formally closing the proceedings. The exoneration of the three officers does not, however, foreclose other ongoing legal processes connected to the stampede.