‘Heat of the moment’, Aaftab tells court; no confession yet
NEW DELHI: Aaftab Poonawala, a 28-year-old man accused of murdering his girlfriend Shraddha Walkar and hacking her body into 35 pieces, briefly broke his silence before a Delhi court on Tuesday, said his lawyer, who insisted that his client did not confess to the grisly crime that has shocked the country. Poonawala was produced before metropolitan magistrate Aviral Shukla, who asked the prime accused if he knew what he had done. “Whatever happened, took place in the heat of the moment and nothing was deliberate,” Poonawala told the judge, according to his lawyer, Avinash Kumar. Poonawala didn’t specify what he was talking about or if it was connected to the alleged crime, Kumar added.
The proceedings were held in secret at 9.30am in the lock-up of the Saket court complex, even before the start of court hours, after the police submitted that the matter was sensitive.
Kumar, who was present during the remand hearing, said that his client did not make a confession and his statement to the judge couldn’t be considered as an admission. Police officials have earlier said that they suspected domestic abuse in the past.
“He just responded to the judge’s query. So it would be incorrect to say that this was a confession to the court,” Kumar said.
He added the statement by Poonwala will, in any case, not be admissible in the court of law as evidence under the Indian Evidence Act, 1971. Police officials earlier said that Poonawala confessed to the crime but their contention is not admissible in court unless corroborated by hard proof.
“A confession in the criminal jurisprudence would mean pleading guilty at the stage of framing of charges. In other instances, the accused may admit to the commission of crime while recording his statement before the magistrate under 164 Code of Criminal Procedure (CRPC),” he said. “However, even that statement is tested on the anvil of law,” he added. Poonawala’s counsel also said that the judge asked his client whether he had any grievances with the police or any sign of physical harm. “He told the court that the police have been cooperating with him and there is no problem he is facing from the investigating agency,” the counsel said.
Another metropolitan magistrate Vijayshree Rathore, meanwhile, allowed the police application for conducting a polygraph test on Poonawala, who had consented to the controversial exercise. A panel of psychologists on Tuesday night carried out the polygraph test on Poonawala at the forensic science laboratory (FSL) in Rohini, asking the suspect at least 50 questions. The procedure continued till late Tuesday.
The court extended Poonawala’s police custody by four more days.