NEW DELHI: Do not
prescribe death penalty with
an eye only on the
abhorrence of the crime,
equally consider factors that
can help the prisoner keep
his life, the Supreme Court
told judges across the
country in a verdict on
Wednesday. In a judgment
which may become a
significant precedent to the
anti-death penalty cause, the
apex court said trial judges
should not be swayed in
favour of death penalty
merely because of the
dreadful nature of the crime
and its harmful impact on the
society. They should equally
consider the mitigating
factors in favour of life
imprisonment. The judgment
by a three-judge Bench led
by Justice A.M. Khanwilkar
came in the rape and murder
of a seven-year-old. The
court commuted the death
penalty of the convict to life
imprisonment.
Justice Dinesh
Maheshwari, who authored
the judgment, referred to the
evolution of the principles of
penology. Justice
Maheshwari said penology
had grown to accommodate
the philosophy of
preservation of human life.
Justice Maheshwari
noted that though capital
punishment serves as a
deterrent and a response to
the society’s call for
appropriate punishment in
appropriate cases, the
principles of penology have
evolved to balance the other
obligations of the society, i.e.,
of preserving the human life,
be it of accused, unless
termination thereof is
inevitable and is to serve the
other societal causes and
collective conscience of
society. Today, judiciary has
other options to death
penalty, the court noted.
These could include life
imprisonment without
remission or premature
release, particularly while
dealing with heinous crimes.
These are midway
approaches devised through
the delicate balancing of the
judicial process in cases
involving heinous crimes.
‘Intense remarks’
In the current case, the
apex court noted that both
the lower courts made
intense remarks about the
abhorrence of the crime but
did not carefully consider the
mitigating factors in favour of
the accused before
sentencing him to death.
Justice Maheshwari said
the courts should have given
due consideration to the
equally relevant aspect
pertaining to mitigating
factors before arriving at a
conclusion that option of any
other punishment than the
capital one was foreclosed.
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For clarifications/queries,
please contact Public Talk of India at:+91-120-xxxxxx
+91-xxxxxx
supportxxxx@gmail.com