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Nirbhaya case: End of road for Mukesh after SC rejects plea challenging rejection of mercy petition

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Jan 29 2020 | 6:10 PM IST

The Supreme Court on Wednesday dismissed Nirbhaya case convict Mukesh Kumar Singh's petition challenging the rejection of his mercy plea and said its "quick consideration" does not suggest non-application of mind by the president.

With a three-judge bench headed by Justice R Banumathi turning down his plea, it's the end of the legal road for Mukesh, one of the four men on death row in the 2012 gangrape and murder case of a physiotherapy intern in Delhi scheduled to be executed at 6 am on February 1.

However, the other three -- Pawan Gupta, Vinay Kumar Sharma and Akshay Kumar -- still have avenues left. Convicts have the option of moving a mercy petition before the president only after the apex court dismisses their curative plea.

On Wednesday, Akshay moved the top court with a curative petition, the last recourse in a court of law. The apex court has already rejected the curative petition of Vinay and the fourth convict, Pawan, is yet to file a curative plea.

The trial court has issued black warrants for their execution on February 1, three days away, but it is unlikely it will be carried through.

According to apex court guidelines, convicts cannot be hanged until 14 days after their mercy plea has been rejected. Moreover, Delhi Prison Rules, 2018, stipulate that all prisoners convicted in the same case have to be executed together.

Hearing Mukesh's plea, the apex court held that President Ram Nath Kovind took into consideration all documents, including the verdicts delivered in the case by the courts, past criminal history of convict, economic condition of his family, while rejecting the mercy petition.

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The bench, also comprising Justices Ashok Bhushan and A S Bopanna, said alleged sufferings in jail cannot be a ground to seek judicial review of the executive order passed under Article 72 of the Constitution, which deals with the power of the president to grant pardons and to suspend, remit or commute sentences in certain cases.

"In the result, we do not find any ground for exercise of judicial review of the order of the President of India rejecting the petitioner's (Mukesh) mercy petition and this petition is liable to be dismissed," the bench said in its 25-page order.

It observed that documents, including DNA and odontology reports, dying declaration, case diary and charge sheet of the case were already considered by the trial court, high court as well as the apex court. The defence put forth by Mukesh was already rejected.

"It is not necessary that each and every material relied upon by the petitioner-accused should have been placed before the president. There is no merit in the contention of the petitioner that relevant materials were kept out of the consideration of the president," the bench said.

It did not accept the contentions of Mukesh's counsel that he was allegedly kept in solitary confinement for over eight months.

The apex court referred to an affidavit filed by Director General (Prisons) which said he was kept in a separate room with iron bars open to air for security reasons and this cannot be equated with solitary confinement.

"This cannot therefore be a ground for review of the order rejecting the petitioner's mercy petition," the bench said.

Dealing with arguments of the convict's counsel that the mercy plea was rejected with "lightning speed", the bench said, "As held by the constitution bench..., the court shall keep in mind that where the power is vested in a very high authority, it must be presumed that the said authority would act carefully after an objective consideration of all the aspects of the matter.

"Merely because there was quick consideration and rejection of the petitioner's mercy petition, it cannot be assumed that the matter was proceeded with pre-determined mind."

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First Published: Jan 29 2020 | 6:10 PM IST

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