The Supreme Court today agreed to hear a plea of a death row convict seeking that review petitions filed by him and other condemned prisoners against their sentence be heard in open court instead of being decided by judges in chambers.
A bench of justices P Sathasivam and J S Khehar will also decide the plea that all death penalty matters in the apex court be heard by a bench of five judges as recommended by the Law Commission.
The court meanwhile stayed the execution of death sentence of the petitioner Sundarrajan whose review petition on its judgement for upholding his death sentence is pending before the apex court.
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The apex court had on February 5 upheld the death sentence slapped on Sundarrajan by courts below in Tamil Nadu for kidnapping and strangulating a seven-year old boy to death in 2009 when Rs five lakh ransom demand for the child's release was not paid.
He has pleaded that the safeguard of hearing review petitions in open court is required as "it would be the final barrier against judicial errors resulting in loss of life."
"The recommendation in the Law Commission report that all death penalty matters in the Supreme Court be heard by a bench of five judges be implemented and, in the alternative, at the least three judges ought to hear criminal appeals where capital punishment is involved," he has said in his petition filed through advocate Renjith B Marar.
"It is submitted that where life itself is at stake, the fact that the consequence of an error which may be irreversible is grave, and sets death penalty cases distinguishable as a class apart from other cases where review petitions may be disposed of in circulation," Sundarrajan, who hails from Tamil Nadu, has said.