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Video Editor: Purnendu Pritam
After news that police dropped the murder charge in the Tabrez Ansari lynching case – first reported by The Quint – made headlines, there was uproar that the police had dropped the charge to protect the accused. Police had cited the doctor’s opinion from the post-mortem report as the rationale for these dropped charges.
The Quint has now accessed the post-mortem report and talked to human rights and criminal lawyers about whether the doctor’s opinion constituted a solid basis for police to drop the charges against the 11 accused.
While Section 302 (punishment for murder) has been dropped, Section 304 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder) is still in the charge sheet.
WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MURDER AND CULPABLE HOMICIDE?
The degree of knowledge, and the corresponding intent to kill, is higher for murder than for culpable homicide. The punishments for the two also vary. While the maximum punishment for murder is the death penalty, for culpable homicide it is life imprisonment.
WHAT THE POST MORTEM SAYS
The post-mortem observes that:-
1) There is fracture in the right fronto-perital bone of the skull.
2) There is sub-archnoid haemorrhage 02 to 03 ml on the right side fronto-perital region of the brain.
3) All the organs are pale.
4) All the chambers of the heart are filled with blood.
5) There is no poison found in FSL report.
On the basis of above main findings we opined that:-
WHAT LAWYERS HAVE TO SAY
The Quint consulted lawyers to understand if this 'opinion' was reason enough to drop the murder charge at the stage of submitting the charge sheet in court.
Human Rights Law Network lawyer Aman Khan came down against the police's move. He said, "This fracture of the skull shows that one had the intention as well as knowledge that you were going to kill somebody. There is no reason, then, for the police to have dropped Section 302 based on the opinion mentioned in the post-mortem report. It is very clear-cut. The cardiac arrest is due to the injuries which were caused due to the beating, simple.”
He went ahead and questioned the honesty with which the police is conducting their investigation. "This is not the ordinary practice. This clearly shows that the police is biased,” adding:
Supreme Court lawyer Anas Tanvir Siddiqui holds a similar view. He said, “The opinion in the post-mortem report goes on to clearly state the cause of death is cardiac arrest, which was caused due to the injuries he suffered. Secondly, the fracture of the right fronto-perital bone of skull might not kill you immediately, however, it is an eventual cause of fatality.”
Talking about the ensuing trial, Siddiqui added:
However, noted Delhi criminal lawyer, Satish Tamta, points out that it is not entirely unreasonable for the police to have made this decision. Tamta says that this post-mortem report only confirms that the death is a case of homicide and whether or not Section 302 or 304 of the IPC will be added will depend upon the statement of the witnesses.
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