Rajesh and Nupur Talwar were given a life sentence by an Uttar Pradesh court for killing their daughter, Aarushi in 2013.
New Delhi:
With the Aarushi-Hemraj double murder case back in public discourse following a Bollywood film being made on it, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has decided to put out all court orders related to the case on their website.
The dentist couple of Rajesh and Nupur Talwar were found guilty of killing their daughter Aarushi and domestic servant Hemraj by the Ghaziabad special court.
The agency has started from the beginning of the case and uploaded all the court orders, which includes cognisance order of the special CBI court in Ghaziabad to final conviction order by the sessions court in 2013.
The Talwars have appealed against their conviction.
The bail application filed thereafter by the two accused and order of the Allahabad High Court has also been uploaded by the probe agency.
The 210-page exhaustive order by the then special judge, Shyam Lal has gone into arguments of defence as well prosecution for nearly a year before the dentist couple was sentenced for life for the crimes.
Known as an honest and experienced judge, Mr Lal had said in his judgement that there was no evidence of any entry into Talwars' residence in Jalvayu Vihar, Noida on the night of 15-16 May, 2008, when 14-year-old Aarushi and Hemraj were killed in the flat.
In his elaborate judgement, Mr Lal cited 26 reasons for proclaiming the dentist couple guilty and sentencing them to an imprisonment for life.
"From the evidence as tendered by the prosecution in form of oral and documentary evidence this court reaches to the irresistible and impeccable conclusion that only the accused persons are responsible for committing this ghastly crime as the following circumstances unerringly point towards the hypothesis of guilt of the accused," the order had said.
While dismissing one of the appeals for suspension of their sentences, the order passed in May last year said, "The reaction and conduct of the accused persons on the alleged sudden discovery of the dead body of their only daughter Aarushi was not natural."
It also said, "The accused have claimed themselves to be the pillar of the society, yet it appears from the record that they had tried to influence the doctors from giving correct observations in their reports."
During the trial, Talwars had hired a battery of lawyers to contest the case right from sessions court to Supreme Court contesting every bit of evidence produced by CBI.