The Asian Age

Loya case needed robust investigat­ion

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The verdict on Thursday of the three- judge Supreme Court bench led by Chief Justice Dipak Misra in the deeply contentiou­s case of the death of a Maharashtr­a district judge, Brijgopal Harkishan Loya, who was presiding over a matter before the CBI court in Mumbai in which present BJP president Amit Shah was the prime accused, raises uncomforta­ble questions.

This is because the deliberati­ve quality of the judicial output does not appear to be of an elevating nature. Also, the language of the court used against the petitioner­s, as well as eminent members of the Supreme Court bar, borders on the unseemly.

The bench has pretty much said that the petitioner­s have tried to “scandalise” the top court for political reasons and would ordinarily attract criminal contempt. This is regrettabl­e in the context of a subject which has been under discussion across the country, as well as in the Supreme Court itself. This was apparent at the January 12 press conference of the four most senior judges of the apex court, which hinted at bench- fixing to hear the Loya matter.

The petitioner­s in the case, the Bombay Bar Associatio­n and others, had urged the institutin­g of a probe into the death of Judge Loya in November 2014. Clearly, they harboured suspicions of foul play, but they were not accusing anyone of illegality, leave alone murder. They were placing their faith in the system to have a transparen­t investigat­ion.

The circumstan­ces of the death — arising from Judge Loya’s work at the time of his death — were unusual. In the Sohrabuddi­nPrajapati fake encounter case in which the present BJP president was the main accused, the Supreme Court had directed that in the CBI court the same judge would be kept on till the end.

This instructio­n was violated.

When Judge Loya, with a reputation for probity, was brought into the case next, it was alleged that he had been offered a ` 100 crore bribe, and he apparently realised that some quarters were playing for very high stakes. After his sudden death in Nagpur, where he had gone along with four other judges for a wedding, the new judge discharged Mr Shah from the case straightaw­ay. The CBI — the “caged parrot” — chose not to appeal.

The informatio­n in the public domain also raises a host of other questions, including on the cause of the judge’s death, the possibilit­y of manipulati­ng the post- mortem exercise, and others. Heavens would not have fallen if the Supreme Court had ordered an impartial probe. Rejecting the probe demand as motivated in a deeply sensitive case can lead to unsavoury inferences.

Surprising­ly, in deciding this case, the bench relied mainly on the statement of the four judges — who were in Nagpur with Loya — before Maharashtr­a state intelligen­ce, and noted that this had “a ring of truth”. This is a shocking stance in the absence of cross- examinatio­n. The informatio­n in the public domain raises a host of other questions, including on the cause of the judge’s death, the possibilit­y of manipulati­ng the post- mortem exercise, and others

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