Tag Archives: Innocents

Framing the innocents – Part 4 !

Declared dead, family jailed, woman walks back: Maharashtra CM Fadnavis admits police blunder.

courtesy: Indian Express

The case began in April, when 26 year old Shivani Kalmekar went missing from Khaknar in Madhya Pradesh’s Burhanpur district. Her family lodged a missing complaint a few days later. Around the same time, the family of Arun Dadu Kalmekar (24), with whom Shivani had reportedly left, also reported him missing.

In the first week of May, police recovered the headless and partially charred body of an unidentified young woman near Rajura Dam in Maharashtra’s Buldhana district. Investigators suspected the body was Shivani’s and, based on information gathered during the probe, detained her father, Bapurao Kalmekar, and brother, Ajay.

Police said the father and son allegedly confessed during interrogation to murdering Shivani. Based on the confession, they were arrested and remanded to judicial custody, even as investigators initiated the process of conducting DNA tests to establish the identity of the body.

However, on May 28, Khaknar police informed their counterparts in Jalgaon Jamod that Shivani had been traced alive. She later appeared at the Jalgaon Jamod police station and recorded her statement, telling officers, “I am alive. Nothing has happened to me. My father and brother should be released.”

The investigation by the Madhya Pradesh Police revealed that Shivani and Arun had travelled together and were traced near Nashik in Maharashtra, where Arun was working as a labourer.

The development forced Maharashtra Police to reopen the investigation into the unidentified body recovered near Rajura Dam. At the time, Buldhana police maintained that the father and brother had voluntarily confessed to the murder and said they were unable to explain why the two had admitted to a crime that, by then, appeared not to have occurred. Police also maintained that the accused had misled investigators by repeatedly providing false information during the investigation.

The case took another dramatic turn when Bapurao and Ajay disputed the police’s version of events.

In a video statement released after Shivani resurfaced, the father and son alleged that police had taken them to a forest, beaten them with sticks and assaulted them until they confessed to a murder they had not committed. They also alleged that officers demanded Rs 5 lakh in exchange for providing relief in the case.

Following the allegations and the public outcry, the Maharashtra Police ordered an internal inquiry into the conduct of the investigating officers. On Tuesday, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis informed the Assembly that all police inspectors, sub inspectors and Crime Branch personnel associated with the probe had been suspended and that criminal cases would also be registered against those found responsible.

ven as action has been initiated against the investigating officers, the police are yet to solve the mystery of the headless woman whose body was recovered near Rajura Dam.

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Framing the innocents: Part II

1720 A.D. Rama Komathi, a man of great wealth and influence, enjoyed a very high reputation in Bombay, not only for his wealth, but also for his philanthropy, benefactions and public spirit. He enjoyed remarkable respect and confidence of the East India Company for over 30 years. He was the only Indian citizen of Bombay invited to attend the inauguration of the St. Thomas’s Cathedral.

“But such is the perversity and malignity of human nature, that, at times, a virtuous man makes more enviers and enemies than an unscrupulous and unprincipled timeserver and opportunist.”

When he became old and infirm, he was charged as a traitor and a dangerous conspirator. His position, his character and his past record might have persuaded any sensible law court that such a charge in relation to such a man was incredible. But, that did not happen in his case.

Trial was conducted. The witness was one of Rama Komathi’s servants. This witness testified during the trial that that there was interaction and correspondence between Rama Komathi and the pirate chief Kanhoji Angare to kidnap the Governor Boone. In regard to the source of his information, this witness said that he came to know about it from a dancing girl and that she told that Angare had told her that Rama Komathi had written a letter to him. That dancing girl was not examined. Letters written by Rama Komathi to Kanhoji Angare were produced during the trial. They were in his handwriting and carried his seal too.

The Governor in Council drew the charge. His trial was held before an adhoc tribunal, which was presided over by Governor Boone and consisted of members of the Council and Parker, the Chief Justice of the Court.

During the trial, the Chief Justice Parker came to know of the torture of the witness and objected to it. The witness had been subjected to “cruel and inhuman torture” and the evidence was fabricated with forged documents and even that evidence was only a hearsay evidence. That servant was tortured by cutting off his thumb to extract evidence and a statement implicating Komathi.

Parker came to know also the fact that such a torture was inflicted at the instance of Boone. But, the result of showing this judicial independence was his dismissal from office, by the Governor. This is what happens when the Executive has so much say over Judiciary.

Rama Komathi was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment for life with confiscation of all his property. For eight long years he languished in gaol until death came to deliver him in 1728.

In pursuance of the sentence, Rama Komathi’s property was pillaged, and sold by public auction. A commodious warehouse in Mumbai Fort belonging to him was taken over by the Company itself for Rs. 20,000.

“It was of course only appropriate that a property plundered out of the estate of a tragic victim of judicial error and malicious machinations of a gang of miscreants, should become the inspiring venue of law and justice.”

It was proved later, after Rama’s death, that the incriminating letters were all forgeries, that the seal was fictitious, fabricated by a soni who was an expert forger.

His immense wealth had excited the envy and cupidity of a clever gang of cheats and forgers and the Governor too became involved in it at a later stage. All that the subsequent Government could do then was to repair the wrong was to give some monetary compensation to Rama’s son.

His conduct of the trial was dubious. He subjected a witness, a servant of Rama, to torture to extract a confession from him, notwithstanding the protest of Parker that judicial torture was illegal under English law.

There is no suggestion that, barring Boone, the other members of the tribunal had any inkling of the plot against the prisoner.

There is also no evidence that Boone was the brain or even the originator of the conspiracy.

After the sentence, Governor Boone invited claims against the property of the condemned criminal; and promptly put in a claim of his own to the tune of Rs. 12,791, a very large sum in those days.

From and For more, with courtesy:

http://bombayhighcourt.nic.in/libweb/historicalcases/cases/THE_TRIAL_OF_RAMA_KOMATHI-1720.html

Cited by Kautilya in The Legal History of India and by V.D. Kulshreshta in Landmarks in Indian Legal and Constitutional

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