Aarushi murder case: 'CBI tampered with evidence, tutored and planted witnesses’
The bench cited a string of circumstances which considered collectively did not lead to the “irresistible conclusion” that Talwars committed the crime.
The 273-page judgment by a bench of Justices B K Narayana and A K Mishra, which was released on Friday, was equally unsparing in slamming CBI special court judge Shyam Lal who had convicted the Talwars in the case. It said, “Like a film director, the trial judge has tried to thrust coherence amongst facts inalienably scattered here and there but not giving any coherence to the idea as to what in fact happened.”
The judges said that the CBI couldn’t even establish the motive of the crime, as the controversial theory of “sexual intercourse” between Aarushi and Hemraj stood debunked in court.
The bench methodically took apart the entire line of investigation followed by CBI ever since it was roped in by the Uttar Pradesh government to probe the Aarushi case in 2008.
The bench cited a string of circumstances which considered collectively did not lead to the “irresistible conclusion” that no one but Nupur and Rajesh Talwar could have committed the crimes. It noted that the presence of an outsider in Talwar’s Noida flat on the night of the crime “cannot be ruled out.”
“Certainly two views are possible; one pointing to the guilt of the appellants; and the other to their innocence and in view of the principles expounded by the apex court, we propose to adopt the view which is favourable to the appellants,” the judgment stated.
The testimony of a Noida administration official Sanjay Chauhan claiming that he was one of the first to reach the crime scene in the morning when he saw blood stains on the terrace was also called out by the HC.
Describing Chauhan as a “planted witness”, the court said CBI had brought him only to contradict the Talwars on hearsay evidence. HC also faulted the CBI for being unable to prove that the dentist couple was awake on the night of the murders and punched holes in its much-touted claim that the internet router remained active due to manual usage.
Despite “tutoring” maid Bharti Mandal, the CBI was unable to bring out from her testimony that when she reached the flat next morning, the outermost iron grill door was latched/locked from inside, HC noted. It led the court to question the probe team’s next premise — that Aarushi and Hemraj were assaulted by the Talwars in her bedroom after which they dragged the body of Hemraj to the terrace after wrapping it in a bedsheet.
“While examining the theory of alternative hypothesis of the double murder covenanted in the prosecution case itself, we have already held that there is sufficient evidence on record suggesting entry of outsiders into the flat… Moreover, during the course of investigation the CBI had arrested and interrogated Krishna Thadarai, Rajkumar and Vijay Mandal who had remained suspects of the double murder for a considerably long time during the investigation,” it noted.
The court also said there was enough evidence on record showing that the golf club, which was handed over by Rajesh to the probe team, “was neither properly sealed nor kept in malkhana and the same had been tampered with.”
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