I’m not able to reliably pull new updates right now, but there are at least two prominent “Ahluwalia v Ahluwalia” matters in the news ecosystem:
1) “Ahluwalia v Ahluwalia” — Canada (family violence tort issue)
A Canadian case titled Ahluwalia v Ahluwalia has been discussed publicly in the context of whether Canadian law should recognize a distinct “tort of family violence”; an intervention page says the case is before the Supreme Court of Canada.[4]
2) Other “Ahluwalia” legal coverage (not necessarily the same case)
There’s also unrelated news coverage about “Ahluwalia” in other legal contexts (including court decisions involving individuals with the surname Ahluwalia), but it’s likely not the same dispute as the Canadian “Ahluwalia v Ahluwalia” matter.[1]
Quick question (so I can give the right “latest news”)
Which one do you mean?
- Canada / intimate partner violence / Supreme Court of Canada, or
- India / another court case, or
- Share a link or the court/jurisdiction (e.g., ONCA, Supreme Court of Canada, UK, etc.).
If you confirm which jurisdiction you mean (and ideally a citation/link), I can summarize the most recent developments more precisely.
Sources
IAS officer Surendra Singh Ahluwalia was recently acquitted in a 37-year-old corruption case due to the failure of the prosecution to prove its case. The case involved allegations of fraud, corruption, and destruction of evidence against Ahluwalia and three others. The court criticised the investigating agency for delays and lack of thoroughness in the case, ultimately leading to the acquittal.
economictimes.indiatimes.comIn the groundbreaking case of Ahluwalia v Ahluwalia, the parties married in 1999, but their relationship ended in 2016. The wife took legal action seeking statutory relief, including divorce, child support, spousal suppo...
absolutedisputeresolution.comanurag ahluwalia Latest Breaking News, Pictures, Videos, and Special Reports from The Economic Times. anurag ahluwalia Blogs, Comments and Archive News on Economictimes.com
economictimes.indiatimes.comFeb 10, 2025 PATHS is intervening in a case before the Supreme Court of Canada this week. That case deals with how Canadian law recognizes and remedies family violence. Saskatoon lawyer Neil McPhee who will be arguing PATHS’ position before the Supreme Court spoke on CBC Morning Edition. Listen here.
pathssk.orgWe're intervening in this case to address the legal implications of myths about intimate partner violence in family and tort cases...
westcoastleaf.orgRead United States v. Ahluwalia, 3:21-CR-82-FDW-SCR, see flags on bad law, and search Casetext’s comprehensive legal database
casetext.com