Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Dec 16 convict’s plea over rejection of mercy dismissed

- Murali Krishnan murali.krishnan@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court on Wednesday dismissed a petition filed by one of the four accused in 2012 Delhi gang rape and murder case challengin­g rejection of his mercy plea by the President. The court turned down Mukesh Singh’s argument that all the relevant records of the case were not sent to the President.

On Wednesday, another convict, Vinay Sharma, whose curative petition was dismissed on January 14, filed his mercy petition before the President.

When there are more than one death row convicts in the same case, they can be executed separately (on exhaustion of legal remedies) provided separate death warrants are issued.

VIRAG GUPTA, advocate, Supreme Court

NEWDELHI:: The Supreme Court on Wednesday dismissed a petition filed by one of the four accused in 2012 Delhi gang rape and murder case challengin­g rejection of his mercy plea by President Ram Nath Kovind.

A bench of justices R Banumathi, Ashok Bhushan and AS Bopanna turned down the argument of the convicted Mukesh Singh that all the relevant records of the case were not sent by the Delhi government to the President, who could, therefore, not make an informed decision.

The court noted that records— including judgments of the trial court, the high court and the Supreme Court; details of the review and curative petitions filed by the petitioner and other co-accused; the present status and other details of the petitioner such as past criminal history, and economic condition of the family of the petitioner— were sent by the Delhi government to the President. It, therefore, concluded that the President took into account all relevant material before arriving at his decision.

“By perusal of the note, we have seen that all documents were taken into considerat­ion, and upon considerat­ion of the relevant records and facts, and circumstan­ces of the surroundin­g crime, the President rejected the mercy petition,” judgment said.

The court also observed that sufferings in prison, as alleged by Mukesh in his plea, cannot be grounds to challenge rejection of mercy plea by the President.

Mukesh claimed in his plea that he was sexually abused in jail and unlawfully kept under solitary confinemen­t.

The court also made it clear that because there was quick rejection of petitioner’s mercy plea by the President, it cannot be assumed that the matter was dealt with a predetermi­ned mind.

President Kovind rejected Mukesh’s mercy petition on January 17, four days after it was filed — the fastest decision ever on such a plea. Mukesh argued that rejection of his mercy plea by the President showed non-applicatio­n of mind and reflected bias and a pre-determined mind.

The court, however, held that while delay in disposal of mercy petition may be ground for court’s interferen­ce with the President’s order, quick considerat­ion of the mercy petition, and swift rejection of the same, cannot be grounds for judicial review of the President’s decision.

Mukesh and three others, who were convicted for the gang rape and murder of a 23-year-old paramedic student in a moving bus in Delhi, were sentenced to death. They are scheduled to be executed on February 1. However, a senior lawyer said for that to happen, the convicts will have to be hanged separately.

“When there are more than one death row convicts in the same case, they can be executed separately (on exhaustion of legal remedies) provided separate death warrants are issued,” SC advocate Virag Gupta said.

“This case is also an example of how judiciary has been affected by media hype. Initially, when media hype was there, investigat­ion, trial and high court judgment all came within two years. After media hype subsided, Supreme Court took five years (to decide the case). After Hyderabad encounter in 2019, there was media hype again and the judicial process has been on overdrive since then,” Gupta said.

Earlier, Tihar jail authoritie­s had indicated that they intend to hang the four convicts together. HT reported January 13 that the jail authoritie­s have widened the gallows for this. Before that, no more than two people could be hanged at the same time in Tihar.

However, none of them barring Mukesh have exhausted all their legal remedies.

The four convicts, Mukesh, Pawan Gupta, Vinay Sharma and Akshay, were convicted and sentenced to death by the trial court in 2013. Their conviction and sentence were confirmed by the Delhi high court in 2014 and the Supreme Court in May 2017. Subsequent­ly, the review petitions filed by Mukesh, Pawan and Vinay against the Supreme Court judgment were dismissed in 2018 and Akshay’s review petition was dismissed in December 2019.

Additional Sessions Judge, Patiala House, on January 7, 2020, issued a death warrant against four convicts and scheduled their execution on January 22.

This left the convicts with two weeks to file both the curative and mercy petition.

Two convicts Mukesh and Vinay then filed curative petitions in the top court challengin­g its May 2017 judgment which had upheld their conviction and death sentence. The Supreme Court dismissed the curative petitions on January 14.

Immediatel­y after that, Mukesh filed his mercy plea before the President which led to the execution date being postponed to February 1. One of the accused, Akshay, filed his curative petition on Tuesday. The curative petition filed by Akshay will be decided by a five-judge bench headed by justice NV Ramana at 1pm Thursday.

Another convict, Vinay Sharma, whose curative petition was dismissed on January 14 filed his mercy petition on Wednesday before the President.

There was no immediate clarity on how this would affect the date of execution, though the law demands that all remedies are exhausted before a death row convict is sent to the gallows.

The way the petitions are being filed by the convicts has come under criticism from several experts and the Union government, on January 22, filed an applicatio­n in top court seeking changes in the manner in which the remedies can be exercised by imposing deadline for death row convicts to file curative and mercy petitions.

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