This Article is From Jan 23, 2024

Journalist Soumya Vishwanathan's Killers Challenge Life Sentence, High Court Seeks Cops Reply

The high court also asked the authorities to file reply to the convicts' interim application seeking suspension of their sentence.

Journalist Soumya Vishwanathan's Killers Challenge Life Sentence, High Court Seeks Cops Reply

Soumya was shot dead in 2008 while she was returning home from office.

New Delhi:

The Delhi High Court on Tuesday asked the city police to respond to appeals filed by the four convicts handed down life imprisonment in the Soumya Vishwanathan murder case challenging their conviction and sentence. 

A bench of Justices Suresh Kumar Kait and Manoj Jain issued notice to the police on the appeals by Ravi Kapoor, Amit Shukla, Baljeet Singh Malik and Ajay Kumar.

Vishwanathan, who worked with a leading English news channel, was shot dead in the early hours of September 30, 2008 on Nelson Mandela Marg in south Delhi while she was returning home from work in her car.

“Appeal admitted. Trial court record be requisitioned,” the high court said.

The high court also asked the authorities to file a reply to the interim application moved by the convicts for suspension of their sentence.

The bench, which asked the jail authorities to submit the nominal roll on their conduct in prison, listed the interim application for hearing on February 12.

A special court had on November 26, 2023 awarded two life terms to Ravi Kapoor, Amit Shukla, Baljeet Malik and Ajay Kumar under Section 302 (murder) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and section 3(1)(i) (committing organised crime resulting in the death of any person) of the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA). The court had made it clear that the sentences will run “consecutively”.

The fifth convict, Ajay Sethi, was handed down three years of simple imprisonment under section 411 (dishonestly receiving stolen property) of the IPC.

It, however, set off the three-year sentence against the time Sethi had already served, noting he remained in custody for more than 14 years and underwent incarceration during the trial for offences under the IPC and MCOCA for conspiring to abet, aid, or knowingly facilitate organised crime and receiving proceeds of organised crime.

During the brief hearing in the high court on Tuesday, advocate Dimple, representing Kapoor, submitted he has been in custody for the last 14 years and nine months, and urged the court to suspend his sentence during the pendency of the appeal.

A similar prayer for suspension of sentence was also made by advocate Amit Kumar, who represented Shukla, Malik and Ajay Kumar.

While sentencing Kapoor, Shukla, Malik and Kumar to double life imprisonment, the trial court had also imposed a fine of Rs 1.25 lakh on each of them. It had imposed a fine of Rs 7.25 lakh on Sethi.

Recently, the high court denied parole to Kapoor considering the gravity of the offences committed by him.

Out of the four convicts, Kapoor, Shukla and Malik were also convicted of killing IT professional Jigisha Ghosh. The trio later confessed to police they were also behind Vishwanathan's murder, and the weapon used for killing her was recovered from their possession.

The Delhi Police had said the motive behind Vishwanathan's killing was robbery.

The trial court had awarded death penalty to Kapoor and Shukla and sentenced Malik to life imprisonment in the 2009 Jigisha Ghosh murder case. However, the death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment by the high court. The high court upheld Malik's life sentence.

According to the prosecution, Kapoor shot Vishwanathan with a country-made pistol while chasing her car to rob her. Shukla, Kumar and Malik were also with Kapoor.

Police recovered the car used in the murder from Sethi alias Chacha. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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