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Last week, while granting bail to two formers cops arrested in connection with the murder of RTI activist Satish Shetty in 2010, Additional Sessions Judge Vikas Kulkarni said, “I come to [the] conclusion that all the offences are bailable… and thus the applicants deserve bail.”
Also read: No One Killed Satish Shetty: The Death of the CBI
Former senior police inspector Bhausaheb Andhalkar and former assistant inspector Namdev Kauthale were charged under sections 120(b) (criminal conspiracy), 193 (creating false evidence), 201 (causing disappearance of evidence), 211 (false charge of offence made) and 218 (public servant framing incorrect record) of the IPC. All these offences are indeed bailable and hence, by the power given to the courts through the CrPC, the bail is legally sound, as is expected by an honourable member of the judiciary.
However, the ongoing CBI investigation against them in the murder case has put these facts on the table till now:
Given how the two are police officers with a) considerable power and influence, b) strongly incriminating evidence against them connecting them to Satish Shetty’s murder, c) have a clear history of tampering with the course of justice, and d) are working to save the “real perpetrators” in the ongoing investigation as mentioned in the CBI chargesheet, a very strong case can be made to reject their bail, as in the landmark ruling in State of Rajasthan, Jaipur Vs Balchand at Bailey on 20 September 1977:
Seen in the light of the precedent above, the judgement is only a mechanical interpretation of the letter of the law, completely transgressing the spirit of it. As Karan Thapar notes, it is not enough to observe and follow the law, but it has to seen to be so.
In this case, even though the technicalities of the law allow for Andhalkar and Kauthale to not be charged under section 302 (act of committing murder), hence making their charge of section 120 (b) bailable, the point remains that their six-year-long glaring involvement in the events before and after the murder cannot be dismissed simply because circumstances allow a law to be used; the intention behind the law cannot be overlooked by only fulfilling its letter.
Interestingly, it is on the same grounds that the CBI opposed the bail of Rajendra Kumar, former principal secretary to CM Arvind Kejriwal, currently facing trial for corruption. The CBI said they believe the release of the accused “will create an intimidating atmosphere for the witnesses” and they could not afford any tampering at the “crucial stage” of investigation they were in.
On 20 June, the CBI opposed the bail pleas of the same two cops and a special CBI court in Pune rejected them. On 20 July, the CBI did not oppose the bail.
What changed in a month that the agency did not fight to keep the two arrests they have made in six years inside jail based on hard evidence they discovered, especially during their presently ongoing investigation in two separate but linked cases – Shetty’s murder and IRB’s alleged fraud?
This flip-flop by the CBI aligns with the many other contradictory moves the agency has made since the beginning of the investigation. That we have knowledge of a private meeting between IRB’s CMD Virendra Mhaisakar and former CBI Director Ranjit Sinha, on record through a whistleblower, does not sit well with anyone who can put two and two together.
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