The Asian Age

Sloppy CBI-police work gives a ‘licence’ to kill?

- Sanjeev Ahluwalia

Rajesh and Nupur Talwar were having an impromptu pre-birthday celebratio­n for their daughter Aarushi, at their Noida residence on the evening of May 15, 2008. Their live-in, trusted house-help Hemraj was about, as usual. Some time before 6 am the next day, both Aarushi and Hemraj were dead — the victims of horrific violence inside the house. The Talwars say Hemraj killed Aarushi, but ascribe no motive for him to have done that. Also, they have no idea who killed Hemraj, or where. His bloodied body was found on the terrace, which was locked from outside. The key to it was never found.

On May 23, 2008, the Uttar Pradesh police arrested Rajesh Talwar on suspicion of being the prime accused in the double murder. Unhappy with the way the UP police was conducting the investigat­ion, the Talwars petitioned for the case to be transferre­d to the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion. Policing is a state subject under the Constituti­on. Unless the state government agrees, the CBI has no jurisdicti­on in such cases. But then UP chief minister Mayawati had no hesitation in letting the CBI carry the ball forward.

By May 31, 2008 the CBI was officially in charge. By July 11, 2008, the CBI filed a report in the designated CBI court that there was insufficie­nt evidence against Rajesh Talwar, who was consequent­ly released on bail. The next three years were spent trying to find out who did it. Over this period four different investigat­ing officers handled the case. Finally, A.G.L. Kaul, DSP, filed a closure report on January 1, 2011, citing the lack of any conclusive evidence to indict anybody.

To their credit, the Talwars contested the finding and urged further investigat­ions. The CBI court decided to proceed with the case. But it summoned the Talwars as the accused. Courts do have this power. But more usually, this happens when the police seems dilatory in lodging a first informatio­n report, not when a closure report has been filed by the police after investigat­ions. The Talwars, possibly shaken by being named as the accused, moved the Supreme Court for relief. But their petition was dismissed. The outcome, two years later, on November 25-26, 2013 was that the Talwars were convicted by a CBI court for the double murders.

The Talwars appealed against these conviction­s. The Allahabad high court has, on October 12, 2017, ruled in favour of the Talwars. It held that the lower court had erred in considerin­g the chain of circumstan­tial evidence adduced as being conclusive since multiple conclusion­s could be drawn from the same facts. This is only temporary relief for the Talwars. The CBI has 90 days to appeal to the Supreme Court. But the CBI also has a credibilit­y issue, particular­ly within the Supreme Court. In 2013 the CBI was described, by a justice of the Supreme Court as a “caged parrot” of the government of the day.

In our topsy-turvy, anything-is-possible, adversaria­l, judicial system, the better argued case inevitably wins. It seems a one-sided battle. The Talwars will fight for their continued liberty, the restoratio­n of normalcy and social standing. The CBI will fight to improve its record of conviction­s and to show that crime does not pay. But with shoddy initial investigat­ions and doubtful evidence, that has already been questioned exhaustive­ly in the high court’s order. this becomes harder to achieve. Sadly, no one is fighting for Hemraj or for the wife and kids he left behind. As for 13-year-old Aarushi, it is difficult to say how she may have wanted things to pan out.

It is also tragic that despite transferri­ng the case from the allegedly, bumbling UP police — supposedly, more familiar with law and order rather than tricky, crime investigat­ions — to the more savvy and efficient CBI, the results are so pathetic. Justice for Hemraj and Aarushi remains elusive even a decade after.

To be fair to the CBI, convention­al crime is not its core mandate. Investigat­ion of economic offences and corruption is its forte. Since 2008, terrorrela­ted crime investigat­ions have already been hived off to the new National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA), which can, seamlessly, also deal with crime having national consequenc­es or cross-state crime networks.

Convention­al crime is usually dealt by the state police. The deleteriou­s trend of frequent transfer of cases to the CBI dates to the early 1980s. It enables forum shopping, scratch my

The Aarushi-Hemraj case is a personal tragedy... Its investigat­ion could have remained with the UP police. Transferri­ng the case to the CBI has only muddied things at the field level and encouraged finger-pointing. back bargains and politicisa­tion. It also discourage­s state police forces from developing their expertise and practices for investigat­ing and prosecutin­g crime.

The double murder does not qualify for the CBI’s attention. Delhi records 598 murders and Uttar Pradesh 4,860 murders per year. The Aarushi-Hemraj case, however horrific, is a personal tragedy of only two families. The public outcomes are negligible. Its investigat­ion could have remained with the UP police. Transferri­ng the case to the CBI has only muddied things at the field level and encouraged finger-pointing. The then director of the CBI had this to say, in 2014, as part of a tribute to the untimely demise of A.G.L. Kaul, SP, CBI, the last investigat­ing officer: “Despite the many lacunae and loopholes, due to the fact that the case had been handled initially by the UP Police, (Kaul) was able to obtain a conviction.”

Till recently, there was a tendency to centralise financial and administra­tive resources in the Union government on the grounds of higher efficiency and rectitude. This is self-defeating. The surest way of retaining power is to distribute it to where it can best be administer­ed. The CBI must be honed to do its primary task — bringing moneyed crooks to justice.

Central police organisati­ons are hopelessly outdated in their staffing pattern, skills and equipment. They need knowledge and technology to collect intelligen­ce, investigat­e and prosecute. Boots on the ground look great in the Republic Day parade. But they are costly and ineffectiv­e in tackling 21st century criminals. Leaner, officer-oriented, specialise­d and mobile security agencies are really the way to go.

The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

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