Showing posts with label death penalty tamil nadu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death penalty tamil nadu. Show all posts

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Rajiv Gandhi killing: SC dismisses plea against convicts' release (Tamil Nadu)

09 MAY 2019 Last Updated at 7:12 PM | SOURCE: IANS

The Supreme Court on Thursday dismissed the plea by families of those killed along with former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi by a LTTE suicide bomber at Tamil Nadu's Sriperumbudur on May 21, 1991, opposing the release of the seven remaining convicts in the case.

A bench, headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi, said: "All aspects were covered in the earlier constitution bench verdict in the case and, therefore, nothing survives in the case. In view of the above, the writ petition stands disposed of." As an outcome of the apex court's decision, Tamil Nadu Governor Banwarilal Purohit will take a decision regarding freeing the seven convicts held guilty in the assassination of the former PM and 16 others. On September 9, 2018, the Tamil Nadu Cabinet passed an order recommending the release of the convicts but the issue has been pending before the Governor, who is yet to take any decision, as the petition of the victims' families was pending in the top court.

When in 2014, the then Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa decided to free the convicts, who have already been in jail for 28 years after the apex court commuted their death sentences to life imprisonment, K. Ramasugandam, John Joseph, R. Mala, M. Samuvel Diraviyam, America V. Narayanan and S. Abbas filed a petition against it in the apex court. Senior advocates Gopal Sankaranarayanan and Prabu Ramasubramanium, representing A.G. Perarivalan, who is one of the seven convicts, brought the CJI's attention to the victims' petition pending in the top court since 2014. They also argued that none of the convicts were ever made parties in the case, despite that their lives were directly linked, and as a consequence, the petition has become infructuous.

Agreeing with the argument, the court said: "Having considered the matter, we are of the view that no live issue remains for adjudication in view of the Constitution Bench judgement of this court." A five-judge Constitution bench, headed by then Chief Justice H.L. Dattu, had in 2015 upheld Centre's right to decide, on the remission of sentence of life convicts, specifically where the case was investigated by the Centre. It then allowed the three-judge bench to give the final word on the case. Sankaranarayanan contended the three-judge bench had already closed the case, and as a consequence, there is simply nothing left in the top court and the court agreed.

Following these verdicts in 2015, the Tamil Nadu government had written to the Centre in March 2016 proposing remission of sentence of these convicts as it expected the Centre would be in harmony on this issue. But, in April 2018, the Centre refused to budge from its previous stand opposing the release, saying the crime was unparalleled in the history of the country. The apex court took an opposite stand to the Centre in September 2018, and asked the Tamil Nadu Governor to decide the fate of the convicts.

SC stays death sentence of Theni man (Tamil Nadu)

NEW DELHI , APRIL 17, 2019 01:12 IST

Warrant has left no time for the convict to file an appeal, says Bench led by Chief Justice

The Supreme Court on Tuesday stayed the execution of a 30-year-old man convicted for killing a college girl and her lover after raping her near Suruli Hills in Theni district in 2011. A Bench led by Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi set aside the warrant of execution issued by the Theni principal sessions judge after the Madras High Court upheld the conviction of Diwakar for murder, and confirmed the death penalty on March 13. The date of execution of the convict, as per the warrant, was April 22.

Diwakar (Theni Murder Case)
The CJI-led Bench noted that the warrant of execution left no time for the convict to file an appeal in the Supreme Court. If implemented, the convict would be executed even before the time allowed under law to file an appeal was exhausted. “The period for filing of a special leave petition/an appeal against the order of conviction and sentence passed is yet to be over, we are of the view that the warrant for execution of death sentence, dated March 27, 2019, 27.3.2019, is contrary to the law,” the apex court held. The Supreme Court further recorded: “We are also told that the petitioner is in the process of filing an appeal. The same as and when filed, will receive due attention of the court”.

In its judgment, the High Court had termed the murder as a “brutal act on the helpless young couple, that too after raping the girl”. “The savageness of the act was shocking and such a person will be a menace to the society,” it had observed. The trial court had sentenced Diwakar to death in March 2018, saying the prosecution had proved its case beyond reasonable doubt.


HC upholds death in Theni rape case (Tamil Nadu)

TNN | Mar 14, 2019, 12.03 PM IST

MADURAI: The Madurai bench of the Madras high court on Wednesday upheld the death sentence by a trial court in Theni to a man who raped and murdered a college student and her male friend near Suruli fallls in Theni in 2011. In March 2018, the principal district and sessions judge, Theni sentenced the accused, Diwakar to death after the offences against him were proved. The verdict was referred before the division bench of justice R Subbiah and justice B Pugalendhi and the bench upheld the trial court’s verdict. 

Diwakar, now aged 30 years had committed the crimes when attempting to rob the couple after confronting them when they were spending time together near the falls, the prosecution held. He had also chopped off the limbs of the woman after raping her. The woman’s family had filed a missing complaint initially and five days later, both the bodies were found in the forest area. The Rayappanpatti police eventually arrested the accused and substantial circumstantial evidence proved him committing the crime. The accused, before the rape and murder had threatened another couple the same day in the same forest region and the man identified the accused after he came to know that a couple was murdered. “The brutality of the attack on the young and helpless girl, after forcibly raping her, would show the inhuman act of the accused. We are shocked by the savagery of the offence,” the division bench said and stated that the conduct of the accused shows that he is an extremist and would be a menace to the society. 

The division bench also noted that the accused had criminal antecedents and he once attacked a policeman with a sharp object when police attempted to arrest him for jumping bail in this case. Holding that the present case falls within the rarest of rare category propounded by the Supreme Court, the division bench upheld the trial court’s order. Earlier, before confirming the trial court verdict, the bench also reflected on mixed opinions on death sentence in the country. “Majority of citizens want the judicial system to deal offenders of rape and murder with an iron hand. They want the judiciary to take note of the plight and trauma that would have been undergone by the families of the victims,” the court said and observed that there is also a contrary opinion which requires the judiciary to soft pedal on the issue by resorting to reformative theory and take a humanitarian approach.

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Madras High Court acquits three on death row; raps trial court, prosecution for lapses

The judges ordered the Tamil Nadu government to pay a compensation of Rs five lakh to the mother of the girl within three months.

Published: 03rd April 2019 06:57 PM 

MADURAI: Slamming the trial court, police and prosecution for various lapses in a rape-cum-murder case, the Madras High Court Wednesday acquitted all three accused sentenced to death and directed the police to find out if any attempt was made to shield the real culprits. A bench of justices P N Prakash and B Pughalendi said there were blatant contradictions in the depositions of the witnesses and the post-mortem report and neither the trial court nor the defence counsel paid attention to them. 

While the post-mortem report did not establish rape, the medical examination of the accused too did not reveal that they had raped the girl, the bench said recording its concern about non-availability of quality legal service to underprivileged like the accused in this case. The judges ordered the Tamil Nadu government to pay a compensation of Rs five lakh to the mother of the girl within three months. It was passing orders on appeals by two of the accused and the referred lower court judgement for confirmation of death sentence on the three accused. According to the prosecution, the minor girl of a village in Theni district was kidnapped on December 1, 2014, from her house, raped and murdered.

In October last year, the trial court sentenced to death the three, arraigned as accused by the police. In its order, the high court bench said the lapses on the part of the police were indubitably blame-worthy and not innocent. The judges said they did not go through even the case diary and the original records available in the court were enough to ferret out a can of worms. "We would have noticed a worm pit had we accessed the case diary," they said, strongly criticising the prosecution. The bench directed the Theni district superintendent of police to conduct an inquiry into the lapses noticed by the court and find out if any attempt had been made to shield the real culprits. 

The court also suggested departmental action against Inspector Rajaraman for the lapses. Dwelling on non-availability of quality legal service to the underprivileged, it said it was precisely the reason for third accused Kumaresan not filing an appeal against the death sentence though he was found to be impotent and yet charged with rape. "While the rich were able to get the best legal brains and successful criminal lawyers with the ability to suborn witnesses or protract trial, the poor are left to fend for themselves with poor quality legal service, and eventually justice becomes the biggest casualty," the bench said. This was a classic case where the accused, facing rape and murder charges were deprived of quality legal assistance, resulting in the trial court believing the prosecution.

"It is unfortunate that the defence lawyer did not even notice the destructive nature of the statement of the five witnesses, which were recorded, and did not even cross-examine the inspector," the bench said. The court suggested it was time that the Bar Council of India bestowed attention on this grey area and take effective steps to address the malady. The innocent accused had undergone trauma, it said and ordered them to be released immediately.


Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Rajiv Gandhi assassination convicts Nalini, Murugan launch hunger strike (Tamil Nadu)

Feb 11, 2019 21:10 IST
M Manikandan 
Hindustan Times, Chennai

Nalini Sriharan and her husband Murugan have been in prison for 28 years and their death sentences were commuted to life in prison. 

Five months after the Tamil Nadu cabinet recommended their release from jail, Nalini Sriharan (55) and her husband Murugan (52), two convicts serving life sentences in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, have gone on indefinite hunger strike in Vellore Central prison demanding their early release.

They have also appealed to the Tamil Nadu Governor Banwarilal Purohit to release the other five convicts in the case - Perarivalan, Santhan, Robert Payas, Jayakumar and Ravichandran. According to P Pugazhendhi, Nalini’s lawyer, since the TN Governor Banwarilal Purohit has not responded to the Cabinet’s resolution passed last September recommending the release of seven convicts, the husband and wife duo have started an indefinite hunger strike. “While Nalini started her protest inside the special prison for women in Vellore on Saturday, her husband Murugan launched his hunger strike protest on February 2. Even as the state government has urged the TN Governor for the release of seven convicts, the Governor has not taken any decision. Even though all the seven convicts have spent most of their lives in prison, it is not fathomable why the Governor is delaying the signing of papers enabling their release in spite of the TN cabinet resolution recommending the same,” Pugazhendhi said.

The lawyer said Murugan had been drinking only water since February 2. On February 8 when he met him, Murugan had stopped taking water. The prison staff could not be contacted for comments on Nalini and Murugan’s health but Pugazhendhi said they had requested the duo to end their fast. The Tamil Nadu cabinet had passed a resolution in September last year urging the Governor to release the seven convicts under Article 161 of the Constitution. Nalini also wrote a letter to the Governor on Saturday. “I want to go away from the earth by observing fast from Saturday morning, till I accomplish eternal freedom. Justice was denied to us for the past 28 years. We all are just innocent and circumstances made investigation officers to bring us under this case,” Nalini said in her letter.

Pugazhendhi also said that they would file a petition in the Madras high court seeking a direction to the Governor to take action on the Tamil Nadu Cabinet’s resolution. When Perarivalan approached the Supreme Court last August for release, the Union Government had declined to release the seven accused saying that it would set a wrong example. Former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was killed in Sriperumbudur near Chennai, when he was attending an election rally on May 21, 1991 by a suicide bomber named Dhanu of the Sri Lankan rebel group Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

A Special Investigation Team (SIT) had taken 23 people into custody for investigation and a trial court had awarded death sentence to all. In 1999, the Supreme Court released 19 accused and convicted three people for a life. But it had upheld the death sentence for Nalini, Murugan, Santhan and Perarivalan. In April 2000, the then Tamil Nadu Governor Fathima Beevi commuted Nalini’s death sentence into life imprisonment. Eight years after that, Rajiv Gandhi’s daughter Priyanka Gandhi Vadra met Nalini in Vellore prison. Priyanka at that time said that she had forgiven Nalini. In 2014, the Supreme Court commuted the death sentence of Murugan, Santhan and Perarivalan into life sentence citing the delay in examining their mercy petitions.

Source: https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/rajiv-gandhi-assassination-convicts-nalini-murugan-launch-hunger-strike/story-oaIxuG7PltdzkZYk3Yn1eJ.html (accessed on 19 February 2019)

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

3 AIADMK men convicted in Dharmapuri bus burning case released (Tamil Nadu)

Written by Arun Janardhanan |Chennai |Published: November 20, 2018 3:31:16 am 

The bus was attacked during a protest by AIADMK men against the conviction of former CM Jayalalalithaa in Kodaikanal Pleasant Stay Hotel case. 

(Left to right) Muniappan, Nedunchezhian, Madhu alias Ravindran
Three convicts serving a life term in the Dharmapuri bus burning case, in which three students were burnt alive following an attack on a college bus by AIADMK workers in February 2000, were released from Vellore prison Monday. Three students — Kokilavani, Hemalatha and Gayathri of the Tamil Nadu Agricultural University in Coimbatore — were killed when a mob set their college bus, carrying 44 students and two lecturers for a study tour, on fire at Ilakkiampatti near Dharmapuri.

The bus was attacked during a protest by AIADMK men against the conviction of former CM Jayalalalithaa in Kodaikanal Pleasant Stay Hotel case. Vellore prison officials said they received an order from higher-ups before Monday afternoon for the release of Neduchezhian, Ravindran alias Madhu and Muniappan. Within an hour, around 12.30 pm, the trio was seen stepping out of the prison after serving a term for nearly two decades.

Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/india/3-aiadmk-men-convicted-in-dharmapuri-bus-burning-case-released-5454577/ (Accessed 25 December 2018)

Lower court’s death penalty verdict binned (Tamil Nadu)

CHENNAI , JULY 25, 2018 01:20 IST

Says no evidence to prove Manikandan murdered a four-year-old girl in Tiruvannamalai

The Madras High Court on Tuesday set aside the conviction as well as death sentence imposed by a trial court on 24-year-old P. Manikandan for having allegedly murdered a four-year-old girl child in Tiruvannamalai on June 13, 2013 due to a personal enmity with her father over repaying the loans that he had taken from him. Allowing a criminal appeal filed by the convict, a Division Bench of Justices S. Vimala and S. Ramathilagam agreed with Senior Counsel N.R. Elango that a Mahila Court in Tiruvannamalai had casually convicted and awarded capital punishment to the appellant though there was hardly any evidence to connect him with the offence.

The Bench ordered a Central Bureau of Investigation probe into the murder of the child to find out the real perpetrators of the crime within three months. If the present appellant was found to be guilty even in the second round of investigation, it would be open to the prosecution to proceed against him in accordance with law. Penning the judgment for the Bench, Ms. Justice Vimala said there was a strong dividing line between ‘may be true’ and ‘must be true’ since the former was represented by conjectures and the latter by concrete conclusions. It was not proper on the part of the trial court to have awarded death penalty by ignoring such a dividing line.

‘Circumstantial evidence’
The judge pointed out that the entire case of the prosecution rested on circumstantial evidence which did not support the hypothesis “that it is only this accused and this accused alone” who committed the murder. If the trial court was agonised over the death of the child, it should have ordered further investigation instead of awarding death. “When more power is exercised, more caution is essential. Judging can be done only on the basis of legal evidence... This is a case where there is no evidence at all. Still, death penalty has been handed down in a very casual manner probably out of over enthusiasm and zeal to stray into irrelevant considerations other than those sanctioned by the highest court of the land. “Capital punishment would evoke an awe and send shock waves only when it is based on truth and evidence. It would lose its sanctity and severity when it is perverse and peddled frequently by every other trial court for fear of indictment from outside sources,” Ms. Justice Vimala observed.

Source: https://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/hc-sets-aside-death-sentence-acquits-convict-of-all-charges/article24507102.ece (Accessed 25 December 2018)

Madras High Court upholds death sentence against techie for rape, murder of seven-year-old girl in 2017 (Tamil Nadu)

Sukanya Ray Jul 10, 2018 16:13:43 IST

Chennai: The Madras High Court on Tuesday confirmed the death sentence awarded to a 23-year-old techie by a lower court for the rape and murder of a seven-year-old girl in 2017.

A division bench of justices S Vimala and Ramathilagam upheld the 19 February order of the Mahila court in neighbouring Chengalpattu, awarding death penalty to S Dhasvanth, an engineering graduate. The bench was dismissing an appeal filed by Dhasvanth, who had challenged the trial court order convicting him in the rape-and-murder case of the seven-year old girl, who was his neighbour, in February 2017. The crime had triggered a public outcry and Dhasvanth had faced the ire of a group of women, who assaulted him when he was brought to the lower court for trial.

S. Dhasvanth
According to the prosecution, the convict had lured the girl into his flat at Mugalivakkam, using a dog, and strangled her to death after raping her. The convict had then dumped the body in a travel bag and subsequently, burnt it on a highway. He was held guilty for offences under the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act. Mahila Court judge Justice P Velmurugan, while holding Dhasvanth guilty, had referred to the sensational Nirbhaya gangrape-and-murder case in Delhi and said the instant case merited death sentence.

Incidentally, the high court verdict came a day after the Supreme Court dismissed the pleas filed by three of the four convicts in the Nirbhaya case, seeking a review of the top court's verdict upholding the death penalty awarded to them for the gangrape and murder of a 23-year-old paramedic student on 16 December, 2012. In his appeal, Dhasvanth had contended that the trial court judge had grossly erred in finding him guilty on the basis of conjunctures and surmises not amounting to evidence. During the pendency of the case, Dhasvanth was also charged with the murder of his mother. While out on bail in the rape-and-murder case, he had allegedly killed his mother and fled with her jewellery in December 2017, before being caught in Mumbai. The proceedings in the case are pending in a court.

Source: https://www.firstpost.com/india/madras-high-court-upholds-death-sentence-against-techie-for-rape-murder-of-seven-year-old-girl-in-2017-4706231.html (Accessed 25 December 2018)


Monday, December 24, 2018

Five get death penalty for Polur hooch tragedy (Tamil Nadu)

Published: 28th April 2018 02:15 AM
By Express News Service

TIRUVANNAMALAI: The District Sessions Court in Tiruvannamalai on Friday awarded death penalty to five persons on the charge of mixing poison in arrack which resulted in the death of 13 people in Polur on May 23, 2000. According to sources, the convicts are T Murugan (43), V Kaliappan (41), N Jayapal (51), K Pillaikannu (65) and his son Udayakumar (41). 

Sessions Judge G Magizhendhi awarded death sentence to the accused five persons for mixing poison in arrack under Section (302) of Indian Penal Code(IPC) and also slapped seven years rigorous imprisonment along with a fine of Rs 5,000 each. The accused had been engaged in illegal business of selling arrack and had some issues with another group engaged in the same illegal activity in the same region. 

The convicts, T Murugan, V Kaliappan, N Jayapal, K Pillaikannu and his son Udayakumar, decided to destroy their rival’s business and conspired to lace the arrack produced by the other group with poison. The arrack which was poisoned by the five accused persons claimed the lives of 13 people including a woman in Polur on May 23, 2000. 

Business rivalry
The accused had been engaged in illegal business of selling arrack and had some issues with another group engaged in the same illegal activity in the same region. The incident was a fallout of the rivalry between the two gangs.

Source: http://www.newindianexpress.com/states/tamil-nadu/2018/apr/28/tamil-nadu-five-get-death-penalty-for-polur-hooch-tragedy-1807379.html (Accessed 24 December 2018)

HC notice to police on techie's plea against death sentence (Tamil Nadu)

Press Trust of India | Chennai Last Updated at April 11, 2018 16:15 IST 

The Madras High Court today ordered issuance of notice to police on an appeal filed by a 23-year-old techie against the death sentence awarded to him by a lower court in connection with the rape and murder of a minor girl here last year.

A division bench of Justices S Vimala and Ramathilagam issued notice to the inspector of Mangadu police station. A Mahila court in Chengalpattu had on February 19 convicted S Dhasvanth in the case of rape and murder of seven-year-old girl. He had lured the child, into his flat at Mugalivakkam here, using a dog and strangled her to death after raping her. The accused then dumped the body in travel bag and later burnt it on a highway. 

A charge sheet was filed against Dhasvanth and the lower court convicted Dhaswanth for the offence. Stating that the trial court judge grossly erred in finding the accused guilty based only on conjunctures and surmises not amounting to evidence, the 23-year-old techie filed the appeal.

Source: https://www.business-standard.com/article/pti-stories/hc-notice-to-police-on-techie-s-plea-against-death-sentence-118041100701_1.html (Accessed 24 December 2018)

A man to death for murder in Madhurai (Tamil Nadu)

Published 21.03.18

MADURAI: A court on Tuesday sentenced a man to death after finding him guilty in the murder of a nine-year-old boy around two years ago. Chief judicial magistrate Abdul Kadher also imposed a fine of Rs 5.10 lakh on the convict Arumugam for attacking the boy's mother and injuring her seriously. According to the prosecution, after Arumugam ill-treated his wife, she left him and was living with her mother. PTI

Source: https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/centre-glare-on-ngos-sasikala-husband-railway-protest-death-sentence/cid/1339266 (Accessed 24 December 2018)

Sunday, December 23, 2018

Techie sentenced to death for rape and murder of seven-year-old girl (Tamil Nadu )

PTI Feb 19, 2018 22:24:29 IST 

A 23-year-old techie was sentenced to death, the maximum punishment under law, by a court for the rape and murder of a seven-year old girl last year.

Dashwanth, 23 year old Techie
The Mahila Court in Chengalpet also sentenced Dashwanth, an engineering graduate, to 46 years of rigorous imprisonment on different counts. He had burnt the body of the girl, his neighbour, after he raped her on 6 February 2017, which drew widespread public outrage. While out on bail in the rape and murder case, he had allegedly killed his mother and escaped with her jewellery in December before being caught in Mumbai. Proceedings in that case was pending. The Mahila Court judge, justice P Velmurugan, held Dashwanth guilty on all charges under the Indian Penal Code and those under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (POCSO Act).

In the 135-page judgment, the judge referred to the 2012 New Delhi gangrape case and said that the instant case merited death sentence. "There is no reason to award minimum punishment. If we don't give maximum punishment, people will lose faith in the judiciary. There is every reason to award only maximum punishment in this case," Justice Velmurugan observed. The techie did not show any emotions as the judge read out the judgment. However, when the judge was leaving the court hall, Dashwanth called out to him, but Justice Velmurugan walked away.

Dashwant was convicted under sections 363 (kidnapping), 366 (kidnapping, abduction), 354-b (assault or use of criminal force on woman with intent to disrobe), 302 (murder), and 201 (causing disappearance of evidence) of the IPC and read with several sections of the POCSO for the offences including aggravated sexual assault. The counsel for the victim's father V Kannadasan said there were no eyewitnesses at all, and the case was decided based on circumstantial evidence and scientific evidences such as DNA and superimposition tests. It is decided that the child was murdered, he added.

Reacting to the verdict, the victim's father got emotional and said "justice has been delivered". Later, Dashwanth's counsel said they would appeal against the verdict. The court examined 30 witnesses, 45 documents and 19 pieces of evidence. The girl went missing from the apartment complex she stayed in with her family in Mugalivakkam on 6 February, 2017. The Chennai police arrested Dashwanth, who also lived in the same building. He had apparently lured her by saying he would allow her to play with his dog, and then sexually assaulted and killed her. He was first arrested in February last year for the rape and murder of the girl and granted bail in September. Dashwanth was arrested on 6 December in Mumbai but escaped from police custody the very next day. He was caught again in a joint operation with the Maharashtra police on 8 December. On 2 December, he had allegedly killed his mother Sarala and escaped with her jewellery.

Rajiv Gandhi assassination convict Perarivalan shifted to Puzhal prison for treatment (Tamil Nadu)

Akshaya Nath
December 14, 2017 

AG Perarivalan, a life convict in Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, has been shifted to Puzhal prison in Chennai due to severe health issues. He was shifted from the Vellore Central Prison to facilitate treatment at Rajiv Gandhi government general hospital. Perarivalan was referred to the Government General hospital by the Vellore Medical College, where he was undergoing a treatment.

A.G. Perarivalan
Perarivalan is said to be suffering from hypertension, urological and orthopaedic issues. He, along with his family, had been pleading for medical attention since a long time. In 2015, Perarivalan underwent a treatment at Government general hospital. After the treatment, he will be transferred back to the Vellore prison. 

Perarivalan was taken into custody in 1991, and was given death sentence in May 1999. But, later in June 2014, Supreme Court converted his death penalty to life time imprisonment. Perarivalan's mother Arputhammal has been pleading for his release stating that Perarivalan is innocent and never knew of a plan to assassinate the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.

Source: https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/rajiv-gandhi-assasination-ag-perarivalan-puzhal-prison-chennai-1107145-2017-12-14 (Accessed 23 December 2018)

‘Honour’ killing of Dalit youth Shankar in Tamil Nadu: death for six, including father-in-law

TIRUPUR, DECEMBER 12, 2017 14:01 IST

Of the remaining five accused, one was awarded the life sentence, one got a five-year jail term and three were acquitted, including the victim's mother-in-law Annalakshmi.

A file picture of Sankar and Kausalya at the time of their wedding in 2015. Sankar, a Dalit, was hacked to death for marrying Ms. Kausalya , a caste Hindu.  
In what is believed to be the first such conviction in a case of murder perpetrated due to caste-based discrimination, a trial court here awarded death penalty to six persons, including the father of a caste Hindu girl, for conspiring and killing a Dalit youth who had fallen in love and married her. On March 13 last year, an armed gang had indiscriminately hacked Shankar, a Dalit youth, and his wife Kausalya belonging to the Thevar (OBC) community, outside a shopping complex in Udumalpet in Tirupur district, with long knives. While Shankar had succumbed to the injuries, Kousalya sustained serious injuries.

The police had arrested 11 persons including Kausalya’s parents Chinnasamy (40) and Annalakshmi (35) and the assailants. Following the trial, Principal District and Sessions Judge Alamelu Natarajan on Tuesday held eight of the 11 accused guilty and awarded death sentences to six of them including Chinnasamy (prime accused); life sentence to one accused and a five-year imprisonment term to another accused. She acquitted Annalakshmi (Accused 2), P. Pandidurai (A-3, Kausalya’s uncle) and the 10th accused V. Prasanna Kumar (19) stating the prosecution had failed to prove their involvement in the crime beyond reasonable doubt.

The death sentence of the six convicts would be executed subject to mandatory confirmation from Madras High Court. The court ordered to collect a total compensation of Rs 11,95,000 from the eight convicts which needed to be paid in different proportions to Kausalya, Shankar’s father and the government.

Death penalty
Among those awarded capital punishment were accused P. Jagadeesan (31), M. Manikandan (25), P. Selvakumar (25), P. Kalaithamizhvanan (24), and M. Madan alias Michael (25), all assailants in the case, hailing from Dindigul district. Stephen Dhanraj (23) was given life sentence without provisions for remission and M. Manikandan (39 – the A-11) will have to spend five years in jail. Since the latter was out on bail, the police took him immediately into custody on the directions of the judge.

Before pronouncing the verdict, the judge asked the prosecution why capital punishment was being sought for the accused. To this Special Public Prosecutor U. Sankaranarayanan, cited Supreme Court judgments in four instances where the court had recommended for death penalty. The instances were related to cases of murder of Dalits – who had married caste Hindus, hiring of people to execute murder and killing people who were in helpless circumstances. “All these incidents apply in this case”, he argued. Mr. Sankaranarayanan told The Hindu that the prosecution would study the court order before taking a decision to appeal against the acquittal of the three persons in the case.

An image of the woman, identified as Kausalya, sitting up in her hospital bed with bloodied bandages went viral in India
Source: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/tamil-nadu/shankar-murder-case-father-in-law-gets-death-sentence/article21478790.ece (Accessed 23 December 2018)

Judge who handed death to Rajiv Gandhi killers writes to Sonia: Show magnanimity (Tamil Nadu)

Written by Arun Janardhanan |Chennai |Updated: November 16, 2017 7:30:55 am 

Speaking to The Indian Express, Justice Thomas said there were “serious flaws” in the CBI’s investigation in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case. 

Justice K.T.Thomas
The judge who headed the three-member Supreme Court bench that confirmed the punishment to the convicts in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case has written a letter to the former prime minister’s wife and Congress president Sonia Gandhi, requesting her to “show magnanimity” and convey her willingness for the remission of sentences of those who have been in jail since 1991. In the letter dated October 18, Justice (retd) K T Thomas pointed out that a decision to grant remission by the Tamil Nadu government in 2014 was opposed by the Centre — the matter is pending before the Supreme Court. “Perhaps the Union government would agree if you and Rahulji (if possible Priyankaji also) would write to the President of India conveying your willingness to grant remission to these persons who have already spent the longest period of their life in prison. It appears to me as a matter of human consideration which you alone can help. As the judge who passed the judgment against these persons I now feel that I should address this letter to you so that you can show magnanimity in the situation,” the letter stated.

Speaking to The Indian Express on Wednesday, Justice Thomas confirmed the contents of the letter and said that he was seeking “compassion” for the convicts. He said there were “serious flaws” in the CBI’s investigation in case, particularly related to the seizure of Rs 40 lakh in cash from the convicts, which led him to believe that the probe exposed “an unpardonable flaw” in the “Indian criminal justice system”. In the letter, Justice Thomas referred to the central government’s decision in 1964 to set free Gopal Godse, brother of main accused Nathuram Godse, who was charged with conspiracy in the Mahatma Gandhi assassination case after 14 years of imprisonment. Justice Thomas ended his letter with these lines: “I also feel that God Almighty will only be pleased by showing the magnanimity to those prisoners. I may be excused if I have done anything wrong in requesting you as above.”

On May 11, 1999, the bench headed by Justice Thomas, and including justices D P Wadhwa and Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri, confirmed the conviction of seven persons in the case — four were sentenced to death, including Murugan alias Sriharan and his wife S Nalini, Santhan and A G Perarivalan, and three to imprisonment for life. In the case of Nalini, the only accused at the site of the blast that killed Rajiv Gandhi in Sriperumbudur on May 21, 1991, Justice Thomas gave a dissenting, but minority, verdict awarding imprisonment for life. In 2000, Nalini’s death sentence was commuted to life term.

In 2008, Priyanka Gandhi met Nalini at the Vellore jail and later described the visit as her “way of coming to peace with the violence and loss that I have experienced”. In 2014, the Supreme Court commuted the death sentence of the three other convicts to imprisonment for life. Speaking to The Indian Express, Justice Thomas said he has often wondered whether the bench handed down a “severe punishment” because the convicts were linked to a high-profile assassination. “If it was not a high-profile case, what would have been the outcome? I don’t have answers,” he said. Describing his decision to seek Sonia Gandhi’s intervention in favour of the convicts as “tough”, Justice Thomas said, “They are considered as the killers of Rajiv Gandhi. But do not mistake me, I am requesting her to have compassion at this stage,” he said. ”We had such values under Panditji (Jawaharlal Nehru), too, in the release of Gopal Godse after 14 years of life imprisonment inspite of conspiracy charges he faced in the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi,” Justice Thomas said. Gopal Godse was released in October 1964, five months after Nehru’s death, before being re-arrested for another year.

A.G. Perarivalan, one of the seven convicted in Rajiv Gandhi killing. (File Photo)
Referring to the case of Perarivalan, Justice Thomas said it brought to fore another aspect of the assassination case that generated intense debate over using the confession of one accused against another. ”Under the conventional Evidence Act, a confession can be used only as a corroborative piece of evidence. But the two other judges on my bench did not agree, they insisted that we should use it as substantive evidence. To prevent the laying of such a wrong law, I called them to my home where we had several rounds of debates in which I tried to convince them. But the majority view in the judgment considered the confession statement as substantive evidence as it was under TADA [Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act]. Later, many senior jurists called me to say that the majority order laid a wrong law in the case,” he said.

In 2013, Justice Thomas had raised the question of double jeopardy in the case and said that hanging three convicts after 24 years — at the time — would be unconstitutional. Referring to the CBI probe in the case, Justice Thomas said he was “agitated” during the trial over “serious flaws” by the Special Investigation Team, especially when the agency claimed ignorance about the source of Rs 40 lakh seized from the accused. “The main accused were all from Sri Lanka. I told the then solicitor general Altaf Ahmed that I can understand the seizure of a few Sri Lankan currency but Rs 40 lakh was such a huge amount in that period. That means there were financially powerful forces behind those who were arrested. I asked him whether he investigated the origin of that cash. After a brief chat with the investigation chief D R Karthikeyan, he sought time to reply. The next day, Ahmed told the court that investigators couldn’t find the source of the cash,” said Justice Thomas.

“I was upset over these serious flaws and shared my concerns with the two others on the bench. They suggested that we shouldn’t criticise the CBI in the final order, considering their efforts. Then I suggested a condition: no criticism or kudos for CBI in the final order. They agreed. After drafting the final orders, we exchanged the drafts for reading. But on the day of the judgment, I was shocked to hear Justice D P Wadhwa’s judgment praising CBI officer Karthikeyan wholeheartedly. That made headlines… sending out a message that the Supreme Court was fully happy with the probe,” he said.

“Since I was the senior judge, he read out his draft only after mine. If I knew about changes he brought in his order, I would have corrected mine, too, to stand by my observations,” said Justice Thomas. When contacted in Kolkata by The Indian Express over phone, Justice (retd) Wadhwa declined to comment on Justice Thomas’s version. After his bench’s verdict, which also released 19 other convicts in the case, Justice Thomas said that he read an interview of one of those freed in The Week magazine.

Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/india/judge-who-handed-death-to-rajiv-gandhi-killers-writes-to-sonia-show-magnanimity-4939399/ (Accessed 23 December 2018)

Man jailed in Rajiv Gandhi killing as I hid facts, says ex-CBI officer (Tamil Nadu)

TNN | Nov 15, 2017, 01.44 AM IST 
By Amit Anand Choudhary

NEW DELHI: Almost 18 years after Perarivalan was convicted as a plotter in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, a former CBI officer involved in the investigation has told the Supreme Court that the convict did not know of the plan to kill the former PM. V Thiagarajan also said Perarivalan’s statement about not being aware of the plot was not recorded in his confession,which was heavily relied upon by courts to convict him, as this would have favoured the defendant. Now, Thiagarajan has filed an affidavit in the SC and explained the reason for the “omission”, and virtually supported Perarivalan’s plea for remission of the sentence. “It is humbly stated that accused Perarivalan’s statement that he was totally in the dark as to the purpose for which the batteries were purchased was not recorded by me, because it would be an exculpatory statement and hence the whole purpose of recording the confessional statement would be lost. 

A.G. Perarivalan
Further, I did not deem it fit to record this exculpatory statement because the investigation regarding the bomb was pending at the time of recording the confessional statement,” he said in his affidavit. In an interview with TOI in 2013, Thiagarajan had said Perarivalan, in his confession before him, admitted that he purchased the batteries. “But he said he did not know the batteries he bought would be used to make the bomb. As an investigator, it put me in a dilemma. It wouldn’t have qualified as a confession statement without his admission of being part of the conspiracy. There I omitted apart of his statement and added my interpretation. I regret it,” he said, adding that if he had a chance, he would have corrected the mistake. 

Thiagarajan justified his decision to file the affidavit, saying he had grown concerned at Perarivalan languishing in jail with declining prospects of release. The 1981-batch IPS officer had recorded the confessional statements of Perarivalan alias Arivu in 1991, wherein he was said to have admitted that he had purchased two batteries and handed them to Sivarasan — the leader of the assassination squad — to be used to detonate the bombs to kill the former PM. Perarivalan also stated he was not aware of the purpose for which the batteries were bought and was in the dark about the assassination plan. . “We were not sure at that time about the part played by Perarivalan in the conspiracy but as the investigation progressed there was confirmation about the ignorance of the said accused relating to conspiracy... Hence a mere fact of providing the nine-volt battery in the first week of May 1991 would not make him privy and party to the said conspiracy. 

This internal evidence also makes it clear that the accused was not taken into confidence about the assassination,” Thiagarajan said. The officer’s statements is contradictory to the SC verdict, which had, in 1998, held “we therefore reach the conclusion that A18 (Arivu) was actively involved in the criminal conspiracy to assassinate Rajiv Gandhi”. Perarivalam was about 20 when arrested in mid-1991. He was initially awarded the death penalty, but it was commuted to life imprisonment.

Source: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/man-jailed-in-rajiv-gandhi-killing-as-i-hid-facts-says-ex-cbi-officer/articleshowprint/61650838.cms (Accessed 23 December 2018)




HC commutes death sentence of 2 in triple murder case (Tamil Nadu)

Chennai, Oct 25 (PTI) The Madras High Court today commuted the death sentence awarded to two persons in a triple murder for gain case to life imprisonment.

A bench comprising Justice PN Prakash and Justice C V Karthikeyan, however, made it clear that the convicts — Kamaraj and Elangovan — shall not be released unless they complete 30 years of actual imprisonment without any statutory remission or commutation. The bench passed the orders on the appeal filed by the two accused and also referred a trial by the lower court for confirmation of the death sentence. Kamaraj and Elangovan were sentenced to death by the additional district and sessions court in Namakkal for murdering a woman doctor, her mother and her daughter at their house in Mullai Nagar on October 13, 2011, and looting gold jewellery.

The court had also awarded double life imprisonment and 10 years of rigorous imprisonment (RI) each to the two accused for offences, including robbery. Another person was also allegedly involved in the crime but he died before the commencement of trial and therefore charges against him were abated. In its order, the bench said that on the basis of the guidelines given by the Supreme Court in various judgements, it was clear that the high court should also consider the mitigating circumstances surrounding the accused. Taking note that Kamaraj had two children and Elangovan a child, the bench said it should also keep in mind that these children do not have any anger or any reason to wreak vengeance in any manner whatsoever when they grow up and enter the society.

“To this extent, we feel that it would only be appropriate that an alternative to death sentence can be imposed on Kamaraj and Elangovan,” it said. Upholding the conviction for murder, the bench modified the death sentence to imprisonment for life. The sentence of 10 years RI for robbery and the double life imprisonments would run consecutively. The accused shall first undergo the RI and then life imprisonments concurrently. The bench also expressed hope that the two accused would reform themselves.

It requested the District Legal Services Authority to ensure that the children of the accused continue their school education and also guide their wives, if in some way qualified, in moving forward in life. These positive initiatives taken by the court would propel the accused to reform themselves and when they come out of prison, they would be useful to society at least in extolling virtues of a crime-free life, the order said.

This is published unedited from the PTI feed.

Source: https://www.india.com/news/agencies/hc-commutes-death-sentence-of-2-in-triple-murder-case-2564775/ (Accessed 23 December 2018)


Rajiv Gandhi case: Hearing deferred in SC (Tamil Nadu)

New Delhi, Sep 19 (PTI) The hearing in the case relating to a probe on the conspiracy aspect behind the making of the bomb that had killed former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi 26 years ago, was deferred in the Supreme Court today. 

The matter, which was listed before a bench comprising Justices Ranjan Gogoi and Navin Sinha, was called for hearing in the pre-lunch session but the counsel appearing for the petitioner requested that it should be taken up later in the day. However, the matter could not be taken up for hearing in the post-lunch session as the bench was busy hearing other regular matters. The Centre had earlier filed a report in a sealed cover in the court on the investigation being carried out on the conspiracy aspect behind the making of the belt-bomb.

Perarivalan 
Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated on the night of May 21, 1991 at Sriperumbudur in Tamil Nadu by a woman suicide bomber, identified as Dhanu, at an election rally. Fourteen others, including Dhanu herself, were also killed. This was perhaps the first case of suicide bombing claiming the life of a high-profile global leader. The apex court had on August 17 asked the Centre and the CBI to apprise it of the probe being carried out on the conspiracy aspect behind the making of the bomb after petitioner A G Perarivalan had claimed that this aspect was not being probed properly.

Perarivalan's counsel had earlier told the court that several aspects, including the conspiracy angle behind making of the bomb, have not been probed properly. The counsel had told the court that Perarivalan was held guilty of supplying the batteries for the belt-bomb worn by Dhanu that had killed Rajiv Gandhi. The apex court had earlier commuted to life term the death sentence awarded to Perarivalan in the case. It was hearing a plea by Perarivalan, who has alleged that neither the CBIs special investigation team, nor the Multi Disciplinary Monitoring Agency (MDMA) headed by it, had proceeded with the probe in a proper perspective to bring the accused to book, as several top people were involved in it.

The apex court had on February 18, 2014 commuted the death sentence of Perarivalan to life imprisonment, along with two other condemned prisoners -- Santhan and Murugan -- on grounds of a delay of 11 years in deciding their mercy pleas by the Centre.

Source: https://www.indiatoday.in/pti-feed/story/rajiv-gandhi-case-hearing-deferred-in-sc-1048107-2017-09-19 (Accessed 23 December 2018)

HC commutes man’s death penalty to life term in double murder case (Tamil Nadu)

September 17, 2017 1:15 AM IST

Chennai, Sep 16 (PTI) The Madras High Court has commuted the death sentence awarded by a Tirupur court to one of the five accused in a double murder case to life imprisonment.

A division bench of justices PN Prakash and CV Karthikeyan yesterday commuted the death sentence awarded by the Tirupur Mahila Court to Selvam alias Koolai Selvam to life term. It also slapped a fine of Rs 5,000 on the convict and said if he failed to pay the amount, he would have to undergo another year of rigorous imprisonment. The two prison terms would run consecutively and not concurrently, the court said.

The court said there was no evidence against another accused, Rangaraj, who too was awarded death penalty by the lower court, and acquitted him of all the charges. The court, which also set free two other accused in the case — Nagaraj and Anandan — however, upheld the life sentence of another accused, Deivasigamani. According to the prosecution, a dispute had arisen between Selvam and one Thangavelu over a financial transaction in 2015 and subsequently, the latter was killed by a gang, led by the former.

Investigations revealed that both Thangavelu and his daughter, Mahalakshmi, were burnt to death at different places under the Mangalam police station limits in Tirupur and Vadavalli police station limits in Coimbatore, by the gang. Reducing the sentence, the bench said, “Insofar as Selvam (A1) is concerned, the sentencing must address his concerns in relation to judicial discretion and there must be an equal treatment of similarly situated convicts.” It observed that though it held Selvam guilty of the murders of Thangavelu and Mahalakshmi, the question which had to be addressed was, whether his act warranted capital punishment or whether life imprisonment, “which would act not only as a retribution for his crime, but also, to some extent, hopefully reform him”, would be sufficient.

“However, had this motive been removed or had this entire incident not surfaced in the life of Selvam, the court should also ask the question whether he would still have pushed himself to commit a grisly crime of murder. “If the answer is ‘yes’, then certainly, he would deserve capital punishment, but, if there is a doubt that he might not have exhibited the same conduct, then it is only just that the court also recognises the fact and awards him life imprisonment,” it said.

This is published unedited from the PTI feed.

In a First, Death Sentence Awarded to Couple for Honour Killing (Tamil Nadu)

THE NEWS MINUTE 11.01.17
The Quint

This is reportedly the first time a death sentence has been awarded for a case of honour killing.

In a landmark judgement, a sessions court in Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu awarded the death penalty to a couple in a case of honour killing. Viswanathan, a Dalit man who was working as a railway employee from Vannarpet in Palayamkottai, had eloped with an engineering student, Kaveri, a caste Hindu girl from Mangalakudiyiruppu on 3 May 2016. Even as the couple were away, Kaveri’s parents visited Viswanathan’s house several times, threatening his family to return their daughter. Following the threats, Viswanathan’s father approached the police saying that his son was missing and had sought protection for their family, reported Times of India.

On 13 May 2016, Kaveri’s parents went to Viswanathan’s house in search of their daughter. After a heated argument with Viswananthan’s younger sister Kalpana, Sankaranarayan, Kaveri’s father, hacked Kalpana with an aruval. She died later due to the injuries. Police arrested Kaveri’s parents on charges of honour killing, and during their trial, around 17 witnesses were produced. Judge K Abdul Khader awarded the death sentence to the couple. The government has also ordered Rs 8. 75 lakh to be paid as compensation to Kalpana’s husband and Rs 11,600 to her two-year-old son until he attains the age of 21, reported Times of India. Viswanathan and Kaveri secretly got married on 29 December 2015, reported The Hindu. Kaveri’s parents had started looking for a groom for her after she completed her course.

Source: https://www.thequint.com/news/india/in-a-first-death-sentence-awarded-to-couple-for-honour-killing-in-tamil-nadu (Accessed 23 December 2018)