The Free Press Journal

Court acquits man from death sentence, orders probe against investigat­ing team

- NARSI BENWAL

In a significan­t ruling, the Bombay High Court while acquitting a man from a death sentence for raping and killing a minor girl, ordered a probe against the investigat­ing team for misplacing a vital piece of evidence -a nylon rope that was used to strangulat­e the victim.

While granting benefit of the doubt to the man, a bench of Justices Ravindra Ghuge and Bhalchandr­a Debadwar said courts must be sensitive while granting death sentences.

The bench was seized with a plea filed by a man challengin­g his conviction under the POCSO law and also the death sentence.

The man, a father of a sixyear-old daughter, was convicted for raping a five-yearold girl and then strangulat­ing her with a nylon rope and throwing her dead body into a well. He had put the dead body in a gunny bag and had covered the naked body of the girl with his father's lungi.

On a relevant day, the girl went missing when she was alone in the house. After around three days of a missing report lodged by her family, her dead body was found in the village's well.

The investigat­ion team had seized the lungi as also the nylon rope and the same was sent for forensic tests. It also took the help of a sniffer dog, who reached towards the house of the accused after sniffing the piece of lungi.

However, after scrutinisi­ng the material on record, the bench concluded that the last seen theory wasn't corroborat­ed with any other evidence.

Even the sniffer dog evidence, the judges said was not sufficient as it is not considered a substantia­l piece of evidence.

Lastly, the judges noted that the nylon rope that was seized by the investigat­ion team had gone missing and its FSL report clarifying that the same was cut from the rope seized from the accused's house, was not placed on record.

Accordingl­y, the bench gave a "benefit of the doubt" to the accused and acquitted him of all the charges and even the death sentence.

"We find no hesitation in directing the Directorat­e of Prosecutio­n, Maharashtr­a to initiate action against those responsibl­e for the loss of the nylon string and failure to get the FSL report," the judges ordered.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India