Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Why the Supreme Court must rethink capital punishment

It is the only form of punishment where human subjectivi­ty and human error can never be atoned for

- GAUTAM BHATIA

Earlier this month, a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court confirmed the death sentence upon an individual who had been convicted of the rape and murder of a two-year old girl. While the circumstan­ces of the crime may trigger a natural reaction that the punishment was justified, a closer look at the judgment reveals that there are ongoing structural problems with the administra­tion of capital punishment in the country, which raise questions about its continued retention on the statute books.

First, the conviction was based on circumstan­tial evidence. Circumstan­tial evidence, by its very nature, requires the drawing of inferences to connect the evidence in question to a set of facts. For example, the evidence that an individual was “last seen” with a person who was murdered is “circumstan­tial evidence” that that individual was, indeed, the murderer. Because of its very character, Indian courts have historical­ly held that while circumstan­tial evidence can, in some cases, sustain a conviction, it should not ordinarily be the basis for imposing the death penalty. This was specifical­ly pointed out by Justice RS Reddy, who dissented from the confirmati­on of the death penalty in this case.

The majority judges, however, took the view that there was no connection between the quality of the evidence (circumstan­tial) and the imposition of the death penalty. There, is, however, a very real connection — imposing the death penalty itself is based upon absolute certainty – because out of all the punishment­s, it is the death penalty alone that offers no possibilit­y for future correction, if it turns out that the conviction was a mistake. People who have been imprisoned can be released, and potentiall­y compensate­d if it turns out, years later, that the conviction was wrongful; nothing, however, can bring the dead back to life. It is for this reason that the absolute certainty involved in administer­ing the death penalty sits ill at ease with the fact that in the real world, nothing is ever certain – and sits even more ill at ease with a conviction based on circumstan­tial evidence.

Second, one of the cardinal principles that has been evolved over time by the Indian courts, is that the death penalty is to be awarded taking into account not only the nature of the crime, but also, the character of the convict. Given its irreversib­le character, the death penalty is to be imposed only when there is no possibilit­y of reformatio­n. To establish this, courts have laid down a number of indicative factors, including mitigation reports that track a convict’s behaviour in jail, to judge whether or not he or she is capable of reform. The majority judgment, however, gives this short shrift, dealing only with the attitude of the convict during the course of the trial, in a single short paragraph. On the contrary, as Justice Reddy points out in his dissent, the convict’s age as well as the lack of any prior conviction­s or crimes all point to the fact that the possibilit­y of reform cannot entirely be ruled out.

And finally, the very fact of a dissent in this case — where two judges believed that the death penalty ought to have been imposed, and one did not — points to the inherent subjectivi­ty that comes with such cases. For example, the convict’s socio-economic status (he belonged to the below-poverty-line section of society) weighed with Justice Reddy, but did not weigh with the majority. In light of the fact that the administra­tion of the death penalty has been traditiona­lly skewed on the basis of socio-economic status, this is highly significan­t.

Admittedly, this problem is not unique to the imposition of the death penalty, but extends to sentencing and punishment in general. However, what is unique about the death penalty is precisely its irreversib­le character: Alone among all punishment­s, it is final and undoable. Given that, and given the kind of subjectivi­ty that the Supreme Court’s judgment reveals, there are surely good grounds to rethink the only form of punishment where human subjectivi­ty and human error can never be atoned for. Gautam Bhatia is an advocate in the Supreme Court The views expressed are personal

IN A RECENT JUDGMENT, ONE OF THE JUDGES GAVE A DISSENTING OPINION AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY ON THE BASIS OF THE ACCUSED’S AGE AND LACK OF PRIOR CONVICTION­S

 ?? SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO ?? One of the cardinal principles that has evolved over time is that the death penalty is to be awarded taking into account not only the nature of the crime, but also, the character of the convict
SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO One of the cardinal principles that has evolved over time is that the death penalty is to be awarded taking into account not only the nature of the crime, but also, the character of the convict
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