New Delhi:The Delhi High Court Wednesday sought CBI's response on an appeal filed by Brajesh Thakur, who was sentenced to life imprisonment till his last breath for sexually assaulting several girls in a shelter home in Bihar's Muzaffarpur district, challenging his conviction and jail term.
A bench of Justice Vipin Sanghi and Rajnish Bhatnagar issued notice to the CBI on the appeal seeking to set aside trial court's January 20 judgment convicting him in the case and February 11 sentencing order and listed the matter for further hearing on August 25.
The appeal is admitted. Issue notice. Status report or reply be filed by the CBI before the next date, the high court said and listed it along with another appeal filed by co-convict Dilip Verma, then Chairman of Child Welfare Committee.
Verma too was sentenced to imprisonment for the remainder of life by the trial court in the case.
The high court also sought response of the CBI on an application by Thakur, represented through advocate Pramod Kumar Dubey, seeking suspension of fine amount of Rs 32.20 lakh which was imposed on him by the trial court.
A trial court here had sentenced Thakur to "rigorous imprisonment till the remainder of his life" and imposed a hefty fine of Rs 32.20 lakh on him, saying he was the "kingpin" of a "meticulously planned" conspiracy and "displayed extreme perversity".
READ:Muzaffarpur shelter home: Brajesh Thakur moves HC against jail for life for sexual assault
Besides Thakur, who once unsuccessfully contested assembly polls on Bihar People's Party (BPP) ticket, the trial court has also sent others to jail for life in the case.
Thakur, in the appeal, contended that the trial was conducted in a hurried manner by the special judge (POCSO), Saket, which was a flagrant violation of his right to a free and fair trial as guaranteed under the Constitution.
He claimed that his applications and submissions were dismissed in a mechanical manner without due application of judicial mind with a view to somehow conclude the trial.
The appeal, filed through advocates Nishaank Mattoo, Anurag Andley and Shreed Krsna, claimed that the conviction judgement and sentencing order were passed by the trial court in a prejudiced and mechanical manner having been swayed by the gruesomeness of the allegations levelled against Thakur and the public perception.
The appeal also raised the issue that potency of an accused is one of the foundational facts which the prosecution has to establish in a case related to rape and said neither the Bihar Police nor CBI had conducted the potency test of Thakur.
The trial court has failed to appreciate that in a case relating to rape, the prosecution must first and foremost establish that an accused is potent and thereby capable of committing the alleged act