[3] Her confession, which ran to five pages long and was written in English, was censored by the British colonial administration, but still found itself widely circulated.
"[4] The Special Tribunal convened to judge her sentenced her to nine years of rigorous imprisonment on charges of attempted murder under section 307 of the Indian Penal Code.
[5][6] After her release from jail,[7] she became active in the Indian National Congress, participated in the Quit India Movement and was imprisoned till 1945.
[8][14] An alternate report by the current relatives of Bina Das says she was found unconscious at a bus stand and was taken to hospital by the police, where she died the next day.
[17] In 2012, Das and Pritilata Waddedar were conferred the Graduation Certificates posthumously by Calcutta University, nearly 80 years after British government withheld them.