Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Acquitted after 13 yrs, life begins at 36 for former medical student

- Shruti Tomar

BHOPAL: In 2003, Chandresh Marskole, then 18, was the pride of his tribal Gond community. His father worked as a mechanic at a public sector copper mine in Madhya Pradesh’s Balaghat, but he had become the first to clear pre-medical tests in his family, gaining admission to Bhopal’s Gandhi Medical College.

By 2008, he was in his fifth and final year, in love with a girl he intended to marry, and on the cusp of becoming a doctor. But in September that year, everything changed.

His girlfriend, 23-year-old Shruti Hill, was found dead near Panchmarhi. He was arrested, tried, and a year later, convicted for her murder. Thirteen years later, on May 4, a two-judge bench of the Madhya Pradesh high court acquitted him, ordering that ₹42 lakh should be paid to him as compensati­on for what they called a “manipulati­ve and preconceiv­ed investigat­ion followed by a malicious prosecutio­n”.

On Monday evening, a bespectacl­ed 36-year-old Marskole, in a creased white shirt with red stripes, walked out of Bhopal Central Jail. He had spent 4,745 days in prison.

In his hand, he carried a bag with the contents of what his life was reduced to in prison — clothes, a few personal belongings, and some medical science books. “I had faith in our justice system, and believed I would be proved innocent. So I kept studying in jail... so I can clear the three papers that remain for my degree. That is what my life inside has been,” he told HT.

The man and the murder

Marskole was born in 1985 in the village of Doke in Balaghat, the second son of Jugram Marskole. There was not a lot of money to go around, and Marskole went to the Kendriya Vidyalaya in Malajhkhan­d, operated for the families of employees who worked in the mine. Very early in life, he decided he wanted to be a doctor.

“He would study at least 12 hours a day for his medical entrance. When he cleared the medical exam in 2003, he was on cloud nine and the whole village came to congratula­te us. People would tell us that he made the whole Gond community proud,” Jugram Marskole said.

Marskole gained entry to the prestigiou­s Gandhi Medical College in Bhopal, and began living in the college hostel. In early 2008, he met Hill, and they fell in love.

“Shruti was from Jagdalpur in Chhattisga­rh. After she failed her Class 12 examinatio­ns, she moved to Panchmarhi where her mother was a school principal. The family used to visit Bhopal for treatment, and it is here she met Marskole. The romance grew, and he would introduce her as his girlfriend. Hill’s family knew about the relationsh­ip, and by July, she had moved into his hostel room,” a batchmate of Marskole’s said.

In a statement with the Madhya

Pradesh Police recorded by the court, Shruti’s father, George Hill, is recorded as in the know about the relationsh­ip, and that a wedding was on the horizon.

But on September 20, 2008, a group of policemen from the Kohe-Fiza police station entered the Gandhi Medical College, and detained Marskole. They were acting on a complaint by fellow GMC resident doctor Dr Hemant Verma, who wrote to then Inspector General of Police Shailendra Srivastava, alleging that Hill had gone missing. Verma told the IG that Marskole had beseeched him to let him borrow his Toyota Qualis for a trip to Hoshangaba­d on September 19, to which he acquiesced, sending his driver with him. Upon their return, the driver, identified as Ram Prasad, allegedly told him that Marskole carried what seemed to be a heavy piece of bedding in boot of the car, made him drive to Panchmarhi, and when the driver was relieving himself, dropped the bedding into the ravine of the Denwa Darshan Mazhar.

Hill’s body was recovered from the spot, a case of murder was registered on September 24, with Marskole arrested and charged with murder on September 25. In July 2009, Marskole was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt.

Through the trial, Marskole’s advocates argued that there was no motive for the killing, and that the case was trumped up because he and Verma had an inimical relationsh­ip. As a counter theory, they alleged that Verma committed the murder, and then used his influence with Srivastava to implicate Marskole — all the while insisting that Marskole was innocent. Thirteen years later, the court concurred by giving Marskole his freedom.

The high court verdict

Issued on May 4, the second paragraph of a 78-page judgment by justices Atul Sreedharan and Sunita Yadav, acquitting Marskole said: “For reasons given in this judgment, the case reveals a sordid saga of manipulati­ve and preconceiv­ed investigat­ion followed by a malicious prosecutio­n, where the police have investigat­ed the case with the sole purpose of falsely implicatin­g the appellant and perhaps, deliberate­ly protecting a prosecutio­n witness who may have been the actual culprit.”

Through the judgment, the court poked a number of holes in the police theory, including the fact that there were only two prime witnesses in the case, Verma and his driver, neither of whom were eyewitness­es to the murder. “He was detained by the police before the body was recovered and the FIR was registered just on the basis of a statement by Verma. He was in police custody for five days before FIR was even registered,” Marskole’s advocate HR Naidu said on Monday.

The court also found that Verma said he had travelled to Indore on September 19, 2008, but had not been questioned as to why he gave his vehicle to Marskole on the same day. While the prosecutio­n’s version of events have only two people in the Qualis traveling to Panchmarhi, the court said that officials at the Panchmarhi Cantonment Board toll station put on record that there were four people in the vehicle, and the police failed to explain why.

“There were other important aspects. Sperm was found from the undergarme­nts of the woman and the bedding, but these were not sent by police for forensic analysis,” Naidu said.

The judgment further said that theconduct­ofthepolic­ewasmalici­ous, with “the intention of securing the conviction of the appellant for an offence he did not commit, and perhaps, for shielding Dr Hemant Varma whose involvemen­t in this offence is strongly suspected though there is no material to hold affirmativ­ely against him as he was not on trial. The proximity between Dr Hemant Varma and the then IG BhopalMrSh­ailendraSh­rivastava, and the fact that Dr Hemant Varma’s involvemen­t in the case was far more than that of an innocent bystander… .”

In the section of the order where it asks for ₹42 lakh to be paid in compensati­on to Marskole, the order said, “The appellant in this case, a Gond tribal, who with much difficulty, thanks to the provision for affirmativ­e action in the Constituti­on, made it to a State-run medical college and was on the verge of becoming a doctor... However, on account of this case, his entire life has been thrown into disarray. He has spent over four thousand seven hundred and forty days in prison, first as an undertrial and thereafter as a convict.”

Speaking to the media after the judgment, Hemant Verma defended himself, and told reporters: “When my driver informed me about something being thrown from the car, I checked with the warden about the girl staying with him and she was found missing. Like a responsibl­e citizen, I informed the police. I had nothing to do with the case.”

Srivastava, who retired as special DGP, said, “I had no relationsh­ip with Verma. All police officers have contact numbers in the public domain and he got my number and informed me. I instructed Koh-e-Fiza police station to investigat­e the matter.”

The state government advocate Piyush Bhatnagar said, “We presented the case before the honourable high court with all evidence and facts. Now, the state government will decide the next move in the matter.”

Bhopal’s police commission­er Makrand Deoskar said, “The advocate general has informed us about the judgment. We intend to take legal opinion and move the Supreme Court against it.” Asked if the case will be reopened for investigat­ion after the court’s observatio­ns, Deoskar said, “We will first challenge the judgment and then act accordingl­y. If the court asks us to reinvestig­ate the case, we will do so.”

The wait for his release

For his friends and family, Marskole’s release has brought relief, but also a deep sense of sadness about a life that could have been. Dr Avinash Thakur, his batchmate, now employed with the forensic science department at the Gandhi Medical College said, “He was the friendlies­t person in our batch, and a good sportspers­on. Perhaps that love for sports gave him the spirit to fight and keep his sanity.”

For the Marskole family, these 13 years have been full of uncomforta­ble questions and financial distress. “We are a middle-class family, and the legal fees were prohibitiv­e. There were difficulti­es but my other son managed the expenses. We knew from day one that Chandresh was innocent. After my retirement, I returned to my village of Doke and it was difficult for us to face people. But I am proud that he never lost hope.”

The acquittal, however, has left a loose end, with little clarity on the events that led to the murder of Hill — and another family that has been torn asunder.

Her uncle GP Hill, who lives in Jagdalpur, said, “Shruti’s death changed everything. After she passed away, her mother and brother died too. Her father George Hill and another brother Varun moved away to Korba, and snapped all ties with the rest of the family. Nobody knows where they are. On my part, we will always want justice for Shruti.”

Marskole is aware that a probable battle awaits him in the Supreme Court. “I know there is a fight that will have to continue,” he said. “But right now, all I want to do is go home.”

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Chandresh Marskole walks out of prison on Monday.
HT PHOTO Chandresh Marskole walks out of prison on Monday.

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