Nand Kumar (born c. 1705, Birbhum district, Bengal [now in West Bengal state], India—died Aug. 5, 1775, Calcutta [now Kolkata]) was a Hindu Brahman official in Bengal, India, who in 1775, after having accused Warren Hastings (then governor-general of India) of corruption, was himself accused and convicted of forgery and executed.
Nand Kumar held several posts under the nawab (ruler) of Bengal, primarily as a revenue collector. Although he had assisted the British at the Battle of Plassey (1757) by holding back the contingent of the nawab’s troops under his command, Nand Kumar generally was hostile to the British. This eventually led to conflict with Hastings, who, before becoming governor of Bengal (1772) and then governor-general of India (1774), had been employed in Bengal by the East India Company.
In early 1775 Nand Kumar accused Hastings of having accepted bribes from the nawab and others, a charge that may have had some basis. However, Nand Kumar was in turn accused by Hastings of conspiring to coerce a third party to make the bribery accusation against Hastings. This charge against Nand Kumar was soon dismissed, but in an unrelated case an accusation of forgery was then brought against him. Although the accuser was Indian, Nand Kumar was tried in a British court newly established at Calcutta (Kolkata), where he was convicted and (because forgery was a capital crime in Britain) sentenced to death. Hastings denied that he had played any part in the proceedings, but his longtime friend, Sir Elijah Impey, was the presiding judge who imposed the death sentence. Nand Kumar’s execution shocked Indians and provoked strong protests from Hastings’s critics and rivals, both in India and in England. The corruption charges against Hastings subsequently were dropped.