Written by Manraj Grewal Sharma
Chandigarh | April 3, 2025 11:31 PM IST
Court held that while there was no doubt about the brutal and heinous nature of the crime, the fact remains that the man has no criminal antecedents, hails from a poor socio-economic background, and his conduct inside the jail has been satisfactory.
The Punjab and Haryana High Court Thursday commuted the death sentence awarded to a man, for raping and murdering his six-year-old daughter in 2020, into life imprisonment without remission for 30 years. A division bench of Justices Gurvinder Singh Gill and Jasjit Singh Bedi ruled that while the prosecution had established a strong chain of circumstantial evidence linking the accused to the crime, the case did not meet the “rarest of rare” threshold required for capital punishment.
| Justices Gurvinder Singh Gill and Jasjit Singh Bedi |
“While there is no doubt about the brutal and heinous nature of the crime committed by the accused who is none other than the father of the deceased, the fact remains that he has no criminal antecedents, hails from a poor socio-economic background, and his conduct inside the jail has been satisfactory. Further, at the time of the crime, he was 35 years years old,” the bench said.
The petitioner was convicted under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and Section 6 of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act by an Amritsar court in August 2024. The case dates back to January 2020, when the petitioner allegedly took his daughter from her maternal home and later informed the victim’s uncle that he had killed her. Her body was found hanging from a tree near a canal bridge in a village. A post-mortem confirmed rape.
His wife, who had been living with her parents as he used to get drunk and beat her, initially said he must have killed their six-year-old daughter. However, during cross-examination in court, she changed her statement, saying he loved all three of their children and would never brutalize any of them. The high court, citing Sharad Biridhichand Sarda v. State of Maharashtra (1984), stressed the importance of a complete chain of circumstances in cases based on circumstantial evidence. It found that the petitioner failed to provide any explanation for what happened after he took the child away.
The court noted that the petitioner was the last person seen with the victim. His silence on her whereabouts further strengthened the prosecution’s case.
Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/chandigarh/hc-commutes-death-sentence-of-man-convicted-for-rape-murder-of-daughter-not-rarest-of-rare-case-9923422/
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