Jeyaraj | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Wed, 02 Dec 2020 04:19:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Jeyaraj | SabrangIndia 32 32 TN custodial death report indicts police, hospital staff and jail authorities https://sabrangindia.in/tn-custodial-death-report-indicts-police-hospital-staff-and-jail-authorities/ Wed, 02 Dec 2020 04:19:11 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2020/12/02/tn-custodial-death-report-indicts-police-hospital-staff-and-jail-authorities/ The report was submitted to the Chief Judicial Magistrate in August, after which the case was taken over by the CBI, but the report reveals it all; the brazen dereliction of duty of the police, complicity of government hospital staff; tardiness and callous behaviour of jail authorities and more

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Jeyaraj (60) and Benicks (31)

The horrifying incident of the custodial death of a father and son due to torture in custody, is still fresh in people’s minds. In June, Jeyaraj (60) and Benicks (31) two shopowners in Sathankulam were taken in custody and were brutally assaulted by police personnel which eventually led to their death within 4 days. A Magistrate level inquiry was commissioned and Judicial Magistrate No. 1, Kovilpatti, Mr. MS Bharathidhasan carried out a thorough inquiry into the case from June 23 to July 31 and submitted the report on August 13.

The accused in the case include then Station House Officer S Sridhar, sub-inspectors K Balakrishnan, and P Raghuganesh, then head constables S Murugan and A Samadurai, and then constables M Muthuraja, S Chelladurai, X Thomas Francis and S Veilumuthu. Another accused was Assistant Inspector Pauldurai who has since died of Covid-19.

Although the case was transferred to the CBI and a chargesheet has been filed, this initial report filed by the Magistrate under section 176 1A(a) of the Code of Criminal Procedure is a glimpse into the case and an example of a well-executed inquiry into the case without losing evidentiary value. It is such meticulous inquiry reports that help the prosecution establish the case during trial.

How the inquiry was carried out

The Magistrate visited the jail where the incident had taken place and recorded statement of the co-prisoner of the deceased, Benicks, citing that it would become difficult to record the same if he were to be released on bail. Evidentiary material was also carefully collected from the prison cell where the incident took place, including samples of blood stains and other such forensic related material.

Further, for inquest or post mortem of the dead body of the deceased, the Magistrate heard out the family members, pacified them and explained the legal procedures to them when they finally agreed to cooperate with the inquest and 3 family members agreed to be present during inquest. The Magistrate made sure no police officer was present in the inquest hall during the inquest. A list of injuries was also made by the Magistrate. A detailed post mortem was later carried out by doctors and the whole process was video-graphed.

When the Magistrate visited the police station to acquire CCTV footage and copies of register entries, it was found that despite having sufficient storage of 1TB, the settings were configured to auto delete recordings on a daily basis and hence no video recordings of the date of the incident were found. The hard disk was impounded to retrieve the deleted recordings by computer forensic experts. The Magistrate also ensured that a new hard disk was placed to continue undisturbed recordings, and also gave written instructions to the Inspector to not change settings to auto-delete mode.

While recording statements of one of the woman constables, the other constables were seen lingering around and the witness was scared to depose before the Magistrate. The court staff that was standing on guard were also bullied by the other policemen. When the Magistrate asked all constables to produce their lathis for collecting evidence, they refused and only produced them after being warned of legal consequences. One of the constables even ran away when asked for his lathi.

Further, many constables were video recording the inquiry process despite being warned of contempt of court and they continued to threaten and bully the court staff.

The Magistrate also visited the government hospital where the two deceased were taken after they sustained injuries while in custody. The CCTV footage of the hospital was also taken in as evidence while also acquiring certificate 65B of Indian Evidence Act (relating to admissibility of evidence in electronic form) so that the same is duly considered during trial and not dismissed due to want of technicalities. The statement of one of the witnesses, a sweeper, was videographed as he is verbally and hearing impaired and his statement was interpreted by his wife.

Findings of the inquiry

The statements of witnesses revealed that both deceased had surrendered to police arrest without causing obstruction or using abusive words towards the police, as claimed by the police in the FIR. The report states that it is important to discuss the genuineness of accusation in the FIR, in order to ascertain if their custody was legal in the first place and to discover the case of death and the circumstances leading to it.

The Magistrate has stated that the police made out a false case against the deceased with an ill-will of burying their sin of police brutality under guise of judicial remand, as Jeyaraj was arrested around 7.30 PM, allegedly for keeping shop open after government mandated hours. But it was found that norms allowed shops to remain open till 9 PM. Witnesses, including constables and chance witnesses testified detailing the manner in which the deceased were assaulted in custody.

The report states that with witness statements it can be concluded that the father were made to undress and were brutally attacked through the night. “All this inhumane violence upon the father and son who were surviving their life with a petty mobile shop without a single criminal history could have been prevented and lives of two common men would be saved if a single phone call was made to the appropriate authorities by the SB-CID police Mr. Santhanakumar who is specially deputed from SP office and who is duty bound to report SP office about every unusual incidents within the station jurisdiction prior to the law and order police of a station,. He is further legally bound to send daily occurrence report to the SP office,” states the report. As per witness account, the SB-CID was present during the incident and gave no intimation to SP office thus resulting in dereliction of duty. He practically abetted the crime but he was merely transferred to another police station.

The report has also mentioned that several incidents of custodial torture have been reported in the same police station. Further, after the deceased were taken to hospital, they were taken to Magistrate court for securing remand. The report states that though there was specific mention of injuries in remand requisition form and in medical proforma, the same found no mention in the warrant for remand and no intimation of arrest was given to the relatives either. The father and son were then taken to Sub-Jail Kovilpatti. The inquiry report notes that despite noting down injuries in the admission register of the jail, the jail Superintendent did not take any steps for 2 days to provide medical treatment and on third day when both were admitted to hospital, they were eventually declared dead.

After taking into account the post mortem opinion and of statements of witnesses, the Magistrate, through the inquiry held that Benicks died due to injuries inflicted by police on June 19 at Sathankulam Police Station.

The chargesheet that was submitted in September concurred with every finding of the inquiry report.

The Magisterial Inquiry report for Benicks may be read here

The chargesheet may be read here

 

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CBI chargesheet confirms brutal torture on Jeyaraj and Bennicks https://sabrangindia.in/cbi-chargesheet-confirms-brutal-torture-jeyaraj-and-bennicks/ Wed, 28 Oct 2020 06:02:39 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2020/10/28/cbi-chargesheet-confirms-brutal-torture-jeyaraj-and-bennicks/ The CBI looked into material evidence from the Santhakulam PS and confirmed the use of wooden lathis by police officers.

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Jeyaraj and Bennicks

The chargesheet filed by the Central Bureau of Investigation in the custodial death case of a father son duo- RP Jeyaraj and J Bennicks have revealed gory details of the 7 long hours of torture inflicted on them. The material evidence collected from the Sathankulam Police Station, Thoothukudi, Tamil Nadu established “brutal torture” against the two deceased.

According to News18 reports, the chargesheet read that, “It is evident from the expert opinion of CFSL, New Delhi that the blood available on the material objects seized from the police station Sathankulam i.e. wooden lathi used by the accused persons for brutal torture of both the deceased and the bloodstains exhibits collected from the walls of PS Sathankulam by FSL during judicial inquiry contain the blood of the deceased Benniks and Jeyaraj on the same. Thus, the fact that deceased Bennicks and Jeyaraj were subjected to brutal torture by the accused police officials in the evening of June 19 and the intervening night of June 19 in the police station Sathankulam, stands established.”

The CBI chargesheet filed against the accused police officers also added that they were tortured inside the police station between 7:45 pm on June 19 and 3 am the next day and were subjected to several rounds of beatings.

Detailing the methods of torture, the chargesheet read: “Process of brutal torture of the deceased Bennicks and his father continued for hours together within the closed premises of police station Sathankulam and all through this, accused inspector S Sridhar has been repeatedly instigating the accused police officers to beat Jeyaraj and Bennicks even more severely.” To make matters worse, their clothes were also removed to add brutality to the torture.

The post mortem reports annexed in the Chargesheet also mentions that the police officers brutally tortured the deceased and “had inflicted several injuries knowing well that they would die of complications of such blunt injuries.”

Background

On June 19 this year, a father son trader duo was taken to a Police Station for allegedly keeping their shop open 15 minutes past lockdown curfew. They were booked under sections 188 (disobedience to order duly promulgated by public servant), 353 (use of force to deter public servant from duty) 269 (negligent act likely to spread infection of disease dangerous to life), and 506(2) (Punishment for criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code. The son died on June 22 and the father passed away the next morning. The post mortem report that was submitted to the Madurai bench of the Madras High Court revealed that Bennicks sustained 13 injuries while Jeyaraj had 17 injuries on his body, which caused their death. After being severely thrashed in the Police Station for hours, they were taken to the Sathankulam Government Hospital on June 20, before being presented before the Magistrate. In the hospital they were pronounced fit by doctors and then presented before a magistrate and finally dropped at a sub jail, in a vehicle paid for by the family as reported by The Wire.

With deteriorating health for two consecutive days in the jail, both of them succumbed to their injuries at the Kovilpatti Government Hospital on June 22 and 23 after suffering from internal haemorrhage. Neither the hospital nor the Magistrate registered the pathetic health condition of the men with injuries all over their body. A friend of Benniks also informed The Federal, a Chennai based news site that “Between 7 am and 12 pm on June 20, the father and son had changed at least seven lungies (waistcloth) each as they had become wet due to blood oozing from their rectums.”

On June 24, 2020 the Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court took suo moto cognizance of this brutality in the matter The Registrar (Judicial) Madurai Bench of Madras High Court Vs State of Tamil Nadu Represented through The Superintendent Of Police and Ors. (Suo motu W.P. (MD) No.7042 of 2020). A Bench of Justices PM Prakash and B. Pugalendhi had sought a status report from the Superintendent of Police over the death of the two accused who died in police custody.

On June 29, the Tamil Nadu Government had handed the matter over to the CBI and on September 26 the CBI charge-sheeted nine Tamil Nadu policemen for murder, conspiracy, destruction of evidence, wrongful confinement, preparing false records intentionally and other relevant offences under the Indian Penal Code sections filed before the Chief Judicial Magistrate in Madurai. In its charge sheet, the CBI named the then Inspector and SHO S. Sridhar, Sub Inspectors K. Balakrishnan, P. Raghuganesh, Head Constables S. Murugan, A. Samadurai, and Constables M. Muthuraja, S. Chelladurai, X. Thomas Francis and, S. Veilumuthu posted at the police station.

On September 14, one Rajiv Gandhi had also filed a Public Interest Litigation seeking action against the Sattankulam Judicial Magistrate. But a Division Bench of Justices M. Sathyanarayanan and P. Rajamanickam of the Madurai Bench at the Madras High Court observed that the plea was not maintainable as a public interest litigation petition since the issue was a service-related matter and that the investigation into the custodial deaths case was already progressing.

J Selvaranihad, the mother and wife of the two deceased had mentioned in her complaint that her son and husband Jeyaraj died after they were beaten up by volunteers or Friends of Police named Ganapathy, Kannan, Jacob, and Elisa, as reported by The New Indian Express. High Court advocate B Ram Kumar Adityan had also pointed out that FoP are roped in for social service with police. “This is aimed at bridging the gap between the police and public. It was a good idea to maintain a police-public relationship, but over time, it came to be misused”, he said.  

The FOP denied any kind of involvement in the custodial death case after allegations surfaced. This led to civil society organisations and common citizens questioning the police’s functioning and the involvement of FOP members in dealing with those brought to police stations for interrogation or taken into custody. It was also alleged that FOP volunteers were asked to help the cops perform their COVID-19 related duties as reported by The Wire. But on July 8, the Tamil Nadu Government banned all Friends of Police activities in view of an ‘adverse report’ from the Director General of Police, Chennai.

Related:

Madras HC orders Judicial Magistrate to conduct inquiry into alleged custodial deaths in Tuticorin

NAPM condemns the alleged custodial torture and death of Jayaraj and Bennicks by TN police

 

 

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