Showing posts with label speedy trial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label speedy trial. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Bhopal: Youth gets death sentence after quick trial in minor’s rape and murder case (Madhya Pradesh)

Written by Milind Ghatwai |Bhopal |Updated: July 27, 2018 4:26:35 pm

The trial lasted for 13 days in which 33 witnesses, including forensic science laboratory officials, victim’s parents, police, and school teachers, were examined. 

A 25-year-old youth was on Friday awarded a death sentence for raping and killing a six-year-old girl he had lured from a wedding hall in Gwalior town in the intervening night between June 20 and 21. The jail authorities did not bring Jitendra Kushwah to the Special Court fearing assault by advocates and others and the sentencing was conveyed to him via video conferencing. After his arrest on June 22, the chargesheet was submitted on July 2.

The trial lasted for 13 days in which 33 witnesses, including forensic science laboratory officials, victim’s parents, police, and school teachers, were examined. Jitendra was produced in the court only twice. Jitendra claimed he was innocent but later confessed to the crime. Additional district public prosecutor Anil Mishra told The Indian Express that CCTV footage proved crucial for conviction because it showed the ice candy vendor going with the victim at 1.23 am and returning alone at 2.48 am. He said DNA reports were conclusive. The victim’s body was found around 9 am after a frantic search by relatives. Special Judge Archana Singh handed down death sentence both under Section 376 AB and 302 of the IPC.

Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/india/bhopal-youth-gets-death-sentence-after-quick-trial-in-minors-rape-and-murder-case-5279426/ (Accessed 25 December 2018)

Monday, December 24, 2018

As Baby Killer Is Convicted Within 23 Days, Questions On Fairness: Report (Madhya Pradesh)

All India | Reuters | Updated: May 23, 2018 18:36 IST

INDORE: Naveen Gadke was arrested on April 20 and charged with the rape and murder of a baby girl in Indore.

Three weeks later a court sentenced the 26-year-old odd-job man to death in the fastest such trial known to have happened in the country in recent times where public outrage is running high because of a series of rapes and related killings. Police, prosecutors and the district court in the Indore worked at a furious pace to get the conviction quickly, amid a backlash on the streets, including marches in the city. This is in a country where Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government last month introduced the death penalty for rapes of girls under 12 years in response to public pressure but which has a notoriously slow court system, with cases taking at least six years on average to final ruling, according to governance tracking group Daksh.

But the pace of the trial, the intensifying push for speedy hearings in rape cases, and questions about the legal defence provided to Gadke - who pleaded not guilty - have raised concerns among some legal rights advocates. They are fearful there will be wrongful convictions and hangings when a defendant cannot afford to hire a good lawyer. "While expeditious trials are ideal, these should not be at the cost of fair trial safeguards like the right to adequate time to prepare a defence and the presumption of innocence," said Leah Verghese, senior campaigner at human rights group Amnesty International India, in an email response to questions. Senior Supreme Court lawyer Rebecca John said she was concerned. "As a principle, I am opposed to rushing through investigative processes and trial processes" she said.

But reflecting the mood of the nation, well-known Supreme Court lawyer Dushyant Dave, a vocal supporter of capital punishment, said India "needs to send at least 500 people to death in the next one year to end this endemic" of rape. "Our system is archaic and extremely inefficient," he added. Such views have resonated with the mother of the dead three-month-old girl as she sat on the front yard of a 200-year-old palace where her homeless family sleeps in the open. She told Reuters she was happy with the swift verdict but her daughter would get justice only when Gadke is hung to death, just as quickly. "Once such men are hanged, no one will dare to do anything like this to any girl," she said. Rape victims and their families cannot be identified under Indian law. Gadke could not be contacted as journalists are not allowed to speak with convicts in jail as per a home ministry directive. Sachin Verma, Gadke's lawyer, said his client told him that his estranged wife "framed" him, but said little else. Reuters could not trace Gadke's wife to seek comment.

SLAPPING AND SHOVING
At trial, the mother, police officers and the prosecution lawyer said security cameras showed Gadke taking away the infant as she lay asleep by her parents. Fifteen minutes later, he was seen coming out of the basement of a nearby building, where her blood-smeared body was found, police said. Medical tests, completed quickly under instructions from government officials, confirmed she was raped, and the semen from a vaginal swab was found to be a DNA match with Gadke, according to court documents reviewed by Reuters. Gadke's lawyer Verma, who specialises in matters related to crimes against children, said he reluctantly took the case on state government orders.

That was after four other lawyers refused to defend Gadke, Verma said. In a sign of how high temperatures were rising in the community, around a dozen lawyers attacked the defendant outside the court when he first arrived, slapping and shoving him, according to police. Prosecutors presented 29 witnesses, including police and shopkeepers who found the victim's body, and "everybody supported the prosecution", said Verma. He presented no witnesses for Gadke's defence. Verma said he could have done better if he had more time to prepare for the case. "They had to create a story and they had to decide quickly," said Verma, who is expecting to receive 4,000 rupees ($58) from the state government for representing Gadke. "My client told me: 'Everyone has already decided I am guilty. What's the point of all this?'" Special prosecutor Mohammad Akram Shaikh said that they had "conclusive evidence" against Gadke. Judge Varsha Sharma, who deals with matters related to crimes against children and ruled on the case, declined to comment.

SENDING A MESSAGE
Police pressed charges against Gadke within seven days of the crime, said Police Inspector Shivpal Singh Kushwah. "All of us wanted to send a message that the law can work fast, and we succeeded," he said. The court sat for seven straight working days to hear the case, unusual in India where one court is often dipping in and out of several cases on the same day. A government-run laboratory conducted tests on forensic evidence within four days of a police request. This usually takes more than a month, Kushwah said. After hearing details of his crime from Shaikh and the witnesses, Judge Sharma found Gadke guilty and ordered his death by hanging. "This falls under the rarest of rare case and it would be appropriate to hand such a criminal the toughest punishment," the judge declared. The sentence has to be confirmed by a higher court, for which Gadke will be provided a different lawyer by the state government. The court's decision can be challenged in the Supreme Court. An appeal to the president is the last resort. The entire process can take years.

ACCELERATION DEMANDED
Even before Gadke's trial, there were growing calls to speed up child rape trials. Lower courts take an average of five years to complete cases of prisoners sentenced to death, high courts one year and four months, and the Supreme Court two years and one month, according to a 2016 report by the Centre on the Death Penalty in the National Law University of Delhi. The university study found that 74 percent of 373 death row prisoners they interviewed were economically vulnerable. The majority were from low castes and religious minorities. In the Indore case, Gadke did various jobs like cleaning utensils in eateries. By contrast, trials involving India's rich and powerful sometimes take more than 10 years. Gurmeet Ram Rahim, the self-styled godman who had many followers, was convicted last year on charges of raping two followers - 15 years after the case was registered. Government statistics show that since 2012, when a young woman was gang raped in a moving bus in Delhi igniting national uproar, reported rape cases have climbed 60 percent to around 40,000 in 2016 - about one every 15 minutes - with child rape accounting for about 40 percent.

© Thomson Reuters 2018

Source: https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/as-baby-killer-is-convicted-within-23-days-questions-on-fairness-report-1856517 (Accessed 24 December 2018)

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Thane: Court awards death penalty to man who raped, murdered 5-year-old girl

Press Trust of India | Updated Jun 07, 2013 at 05:36pm IST
Thane: In a speedy trial, a 53-year-old man was on Friday sentenced to death by a court here for raping and murdering a five-year-old girl in January 2013. Thane Additional Sessions Judge PH Mali while pronouncing the verdict observed that the case fell under the "rarest of rare" category as the girl had been done to death in the most cruel manner and a young life was snuffed out.
Prosecutor Sangeeta Phad had sought death penalty for accused Dattu Ambo Rokade, from Koprigaon in Vashi, stating that such an inhuman act deserved nothing less than capital punishment. Also, circumstantial evidence and statement of the wife and son of Rokade, that he was capable of committing such a heinous act, nailed him.
The crime took place on January 22 this year when the minor girl was playing in the ground near her house while her elder brother and sister were watching TV. Her parents had gone to work, investigating officer in the case API Pushpa Chavan-Dighe told the court.
Rokade lured the girl to his house and then sexually assaulted her, Dighe said. When the parents of the victim were unable to trace her, they lodged a police complaint. The following day, during the early hours, they found their dead daughter dumped at their house entrance in a disrobed state.
The accused, after raping the girl, had strangulated her to death and packed her in a gunny bag. He hid the body in a garbage bin before leaving her in front of her house, the court was told.
The accused was charged under sections 302, 376, 377, 201 and 367 of IPC and also under section 4 and 5 of The Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act. A total of 27 witnesses were examined in the case. During the trial, the court was told by locals that they had seen a old man carry a gunny bag into the building compound that day.
The accused was staying near the house of the victim and took care of his widowed daughter's kids. He was reportedly driven out of Murbad in Thane, where he attempted rape on a school teacher.
This is the second capital punishment awarded by a Thane court in less than a month. On May 16, an industrial worker Shekar Gupta, (22) who was found guilty of sexually assaulting and killing an eight-year-old, was given death by Additional Sessions Judge AA Sayeed.

Source :  http://ibnlive.in.com/news/thane-court-awards-death-penalty-to-man-who-raped-murdered-5yearold-girl/397022-3-237.html