4 days ago
Haryana cops move HC to quash trial in Gurugram school murder case, cite lack of sanction
Two Haryana police officers have approached the Punjab and Haryana High Court seeking the quashing of criminal proceedings against them in connection with the 2017 murder of a seven-year-old student inside a Gurugram school, arguing that the trial court took cognisance of the case without mandatory government sanction under Section 197 of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC). Two Haryana police officers have approached the Punjab and Haryana High Court seeking the quashing of criminal proceedings against them in connection with the 2017 murder of a seven-year-old student inside a Gurugram school, arguing that the trial court took cognisance of the case without mandatory government sanction under Section 197 of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC). (Getty Images/iStockphoto/ Representational image)
Justice Manjari Nehru Kaul has issued a notice of motion to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), the State of Haryana, and other respondents. The matter will now be heard on July 28.
Senior advocates Bipan Ghai and Vinod Ghai, along with Nikhil Ghai, Arnav Ghai, Akhil Godara, and R.S. Bagga, appeared on behalf of the petitioners and challenged the June 13 order of the CBI special judicial magistrate, Panchkula. They submitted that the order effectively amounted to a review of the earlier judicial decision dated January 15, 2021, in which the same court had explicitly declined to take cognisance due to the absence of sanction under Section 197 CrPC.
'No fresh sanction was procured in the interim, yet cognisance was taken merely on the strength of an application moved by the complainant,' the counsel argued, terming the move an 'impermissible review' and therefore 'illegal and unsustainable'.
The petitioners further contended that the allegations against them stemmed from acts performed in the discharge of official duties. Hence, they are entitled to protection under Section 197, which prohibits courts from taking cognisance of offences allegedly committed by public servants without prior government sanction. The plea also includes a senior assistant commissioner of police.
The case stems from the murder of a second-grade student in 2017 whose throat was slit on school premises. Initially, Haryana Police arrested Ashok Kumar, a school bus conductor, but after public outrage and media scrutiny, the probe was handed over to the CBI. The CBI later named a fellow student, identified only as 'Bholu' to protect his identity, as the accused and alleged that Kumar was falsely implicated by the SIT through fabricated evidence and coerced witnesses.