LAKHIMPUR KHERI: SC SEEKS TENTATIVE TIMELINE OF ASHISH MISHRA’S BAIL PLEA TRIAL

                    From Our Bureau
NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday asked the additional sessions judge in Lakhimpur Kheri to provide the timeline for deciding the bail plea of Ashish Mishra, son of a union minister Ajay Mishra Teni, who was in custody for the past one year in the violence in 2021 resulting in eight deaths.

Listing his bail application on January 11, a Bench of Justices Surya Kant and Krishna Murari on Monday said: “The Registrar Judicial is directed to find out from the first Addl Sessions judge at Lakhimpur Kheri as to how much time the trial is likely to take without compromising with other pending or prioritised matters. A tentative schedule shall be submitted as to this case being tried on an out-of-turn basis.”

It said a balance ought to be struck among factors which include holding a fair trial, providing protection to victims and witnesses and consideration for the rights of the accused.

The Uttar Pradesh court on December 6 framed charges of murder, rioting and criminal conspiracy against him in the case of alleged mowing down of the protesting farmers in the Lakhimpur Kheri district in October last year. The trial is expected to start on December 16.

“Under the monitoring of this court, we have reached from the stage of investigation to the framing of charges. There are a total of 200 witnesses in the case who have to testify. So, now the question is at what point should bail be granted… In a case in which a trial needs reasonable time to complete, what stage should bail be given? How long should he be kept in custody? It should not be a pre-judging of his case,” Justice Kant asked during the hearing on Monday.

Senior advocate Dushyant Dave, for the victims and families, said there was nothing “special” or “exceptional” in Mishra’s case. Dave said the apex court normally did not intervene when both the trial and the High Courts had refused bail in murder cases.

“This is no case where the accused’s right needs to be considered. Three witnesses have already been attacked… These are people who are extraordinarily powerful… He (Mishra) wanted to go and teach the protesting farmers a lesson,” Dave argued.

The Court said Mishra has continued in custody “because of our order”. In April, Justice Kant had authored a scathing judgment against Mishra while cancelling his bail granted by the Allahabad High Court.

“He is in custody because the law finds it deserving,” Dave corrected the judge. He said: “If somebody can kill innocent people in a pre-planned manner and can get bail, it can create a dangerous scenario for the future.”

He said that the accused had filed “manipulated” documents in the lower courts in an effort to distance Mishra from the deaths. “In a case as heinous as this, bail should not be granted,” Dave argued.

The Court said the State should continue to protect the witnesses till the completion of trial.

Senior advocates Mukul Rohatgi, Ranjit Kumar and Siddharth Dave, for Mishra, argued that their client was not in the vehicle which caused the “mishap”.

They contended that Mishra was at a wrestling match four km away. Spectators there could vouch his presence. There was no proof of anyone dying from bullet wounds. The car, at the centre of the incident, may have been trying to escape from stone-pelting by agitators. This was no “pre-planned murder”. It was only a “fracas”, Rohatgi argued.

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