Were You Sleeping Till Shahabuddin Got Bail? SC To Bihar Govt

Update: 2016-09-28 14:24 GMT
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The Supreme Court today slammed the Bihar government for not being serious in opposing gangster and controversial RJD leader Mohd Shahabuddin’s bail in Patna High Court and then rushing to Supreme Court after his release.“Why have you approached the court only after his release? Were you in slumber till he got bail? This is a peculiar case. But the question is this peculiarity has been...

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The Supreme Court today slammed the Bihar government for not being serious in opposing gangster and controversial RJD leader Mohd Shahabuddin’s bail in Patna High Court and then rushing to Supreme Court after his release.

“Why have you approached the court only after his release? Were you in slumber till he got bail? This is a peculiar case. But the question is this peculiarity has been done at whose instance and who is behind this. Why you did not challenge bail granted to Shahabuddin in 45 cases? Why did you realise only when he came out of jail? If everything was fair, why would this case come to us, a bench comprising Justices P C Ghose and Amitava Roy asked senior advocate Dinesh Dwivedi who appeared for state of Bihar.

Dwivedi had argued that the decision to enlarge the RJD leader was improper as the High Court had ignored the relevant material in the case. He also said the same judge had in February this year denied him bail on the ground that he was facing trial for several heinous offence and had also been convicted in ten serious crime cases.

Earlier, activist lawyer Prashant Bhushan who is the main petitioner representing Chandrakeshwar Prasad of Siwan, whose three sons were murdered allegedly at the behest of Shahabuddin and is seeking cancellation of bail granted by  Patna HC argued that Shahabuddin was a "class A historysheeter who could threaten intimidate and even eliminate witnesses in cases pending against him if he continued on bail "given in the most casual manner by the Patna HC".

Bhushan reminded the bench that he was convicted in 8 cases out of a total of 58 criminal cases for which he has been booked. “He is involved in nine cases of murder, 21 cases in which the punishment is seven years plus”.

Bhushan contended that there was “total non-application of mind” on the part of Patna High Court which granted the bail on September 7.

Bhushan said in the petition that it was strange that the Patna HC decided to grant bail to Shahabuddin when he was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of two of Prasad's sons, Girish and Satish, in Siwan in 2004 by bathing them in acid.

The third son, Rajiv, the sole witness to the chilling murders, was killed in June 2014 while on his way to depose in court.

Ironically, the same Patna HC had refused bail to Shahabuddin in February and had directed that trial in the Rajiv murder case be expedited.

However, after seven months, Justice Jitendra Mohan Sharma of the HC granted him bail.

Bhushan said grant of bail to a “notorious history-sheeter“ would affect fairness of the trial as his presence outside would have a “chilling effect on witnesses“.

Observing that the Patna High Court committed a grave error by granting the bail, Bhushan has asked how a free and fair trial will be possible when the history-sheeter is out on bail and said a situation will arise where witnesses cannot depose freely and without fear.

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