Justice Loya | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Tue, 03 Dec 2019 11:12:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Justice Loya | SabrangIndia 32 32 Re-investigate Judge Loya’s death: Sharad Pawar https://sabrangindia.in/re-investigate-judge-loyas-death-sharad-pawar/ Tue, 03 Dec 2019 11:12:08 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/12/03/re-investigate-judge-loyas-death-sharad-pawar/ Fast on the heels of a new government in Maharashtra, NCP chief Sharad Pawar on Monday said that Central Bureau of Investigation Judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya’s death should be re-investigated if there is a demand and need for it. Sharad Pawar said in an interview to a Marathi news channel, “If there is something in […]

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justice loya

Fast on the heels of a new government in Maharashtra, NCP chief Sharad Pawar on Monday said that Central Bureau of Investigation Judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya’s death should be re-investigated if there is a demand and need for it. Sharad Pawar said in an interview to a Marathi news channel, “If there is something in it [the demands], then maybe a re-investigation should be done.”

“I don’t know, I read in the paper in some articles, that there is a discussion among Maharashtra’s people to investigate in-depth [the death of Justice Loya],” said Pawar, adding that he had no detailed information about it.

“If there is a demand [for an investigation], then one should think about it – on what basis are they making this demand, what is the truth in it, this should be investigated. If there is something in it, then maybe a re-investigation should be done. If not, then it is not right to make baseless allegations on anyone either,” he said.

Judge Loya was hearing the Sohrabuddin Sheikh encounter case at the time of his death, in which India’s home minister and BJP President Amit Shah was one of the accused. Serious question were raised on whether Loya’s death was natural after The Caravan published a report in November 2017, in which Loya’s family said the circumstances of his death were suspicious and that he had been under pressure to deliver a favourable judgement.

Immediate demands were raised for the Supreme Court to treat these concerns seriously.In July 2018, the apex court had dismissed a review petition seeking an investigation into Loya’s death. The court was hearing a plea filed by the Bombay Lawyers Association seeking a review of the top court’s April 19 judgement dismissing pleas for an independent inquiry into Judge Loya’s death.

In its April 2018 ruling, the top court said there was no reason to not believe the judicial officers who were present with Loya at the time of his death. It accused the petitioners of trying to “malign the judiciary” and called their petitions “scandalous and amounting to criminal contempt”.

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WATCH NOW: Justice Abhay Thipsay touches upon the mysterious death of Justice Loya and the Sohrabuddin case https://sabrangindia.in/watch-now-justice-abhay-thipsay-touches-upon-mysterious-death-justice-loya-and-sohrabuddin/ Mon, 04 Feb 2019 08:18:12 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/02/04/watch-now-justice-abhay-thipsay-touches-upon-mysterious-death-justice-loya-and-sohrabuddin/ Retired Judge of Bombay High Court, Justice Abhay Thipsay, renowned for his exceptional judgments that have always favored the powerless, speaks to CJP on the sidelines of the Netizens for Democracy event. Among other things, he touches upon the mysterious death of Justice Loya and the travesty of justice that the Sohrabuddin case was. First […]

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Retired Judge of Bombay High Court, Justice Abhay Thipsay, renowned for his exceptional judgments that have always favored the powerless, speaks to CJP on the sidelines of the Netizens for Democracy event. Among other things, he touches upon the mysterious death of Justice Loya and the travesty of justice that the Sohrabuddin case was.

First published on https://cjp.org.in/

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Review Decision in Loya Case: BLA Review Petition in SC https://sabrangindia.in/review-decision-loya-case-bla-review-petition-sc/ Mon, 21 May 2018 10:23:24 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/05/21/review-decision-loya-case-bla-review-petition-sc/ In a dramatic development, the Bombay Lawyers Association (BLA) has filed a petition seeking a review of the Supreme Court’s judgment in the case calling for an investigation into the death of Judge Loya. On April 19 this year, a three-judge Bench of Chief Justice Dipak Misra and Justices AM Khanwilkar and DY Chandrachud dismissed the petitions filed by Tehseen Poonawalla, Bandhuraj […]

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In a dramatic development, the Bombay Lawyers Association (BLA) has filed a petition seeking a review of the Supreme Court’s judgment in the case calling for an investigation into the death of Judge Loya. On April 19 this year, a three-judge Bench of Chief Justice Dipak Misra and Justices AM Khanwilkar and DY Chandrachud dismissed the petitions filed by Tehseen Poonawalla, Bandhuraj Lone and others, seeking an independent investigation into the death of Judge Loya.

Justice Loya

Ironically, in its 114-page judgment authored by Justice Chandrachud, the Supreme Court had come down heavily on the petitioners and their counsel, observing that their actions amounted to misuse of judicial process and denigration of the judiciary’s image. To clarify the matter, the  BLA makes it clear that its petition was not filed with an intention of bringing the judiciary to disrepute.

“The Writ Petition was filed seeking merely an independent enquiry into the death of late Judge Loya and such a petition can under no circumstance be treated as having been filed to attack the independence of Judiciary.”

The review petition states that paragraphs 70 to 75 of the judgment ought to be deleted, as it is error apparent on the face of the record. In these paragraphs, the Court discusses the scope of public interest litigation, and makes adverse remarks against the petitioners and their lawyers.

“If the said observations and findings stand, it will discourage persons in future from coming forward to protect this great Institution which is more often than not under attack from the other branches of the Democracy.”

The review petition also states that the only defence put forward on behalf of the state of Maharashtra was the unaffirmed report of an enquiry held by a Police Officer, Commissioner of State Intelligence, which contained the testimonies of the judges accompanying Judge Loya during his last hours.

“If the enquiry was being ordered by the State Government on 23rd of November following publication of Article on 20th and 21st November, how was it that the Commissioner, State Intelligence wrote to the Hon’ble Bombay High Court stating the names of the four Judicial Officers and 2 High Court Judges for recording their say…

…So how is it that within minutes of ordering the enquiry the Commissioner State Intelligence had gathered the names of five other Hon’ble Judges as possible witnesses for recording say when their names were not in public domain at all…”

It is also contended that the observations made in paragraph 43 of the judgment amounts to error apparent on the face of the record. The fact that Bombay High Court judges went to the press to dispel doubts surrounding Judge Loya’s death has been called into question.

“The submission was to the effect that the name of the concerned Hon’ble Judge of the High Court was mentioned in the letter of Commissioner Intelligence, sent to Hon’ble Chief Justice of the Bombay High Court on November 23, 2017 even before starting inquiry to record his “say” along with others.

The Hon’ble High Court did not accord permission qua Hon’ble High Court judges. Yet, the Hon’ble Judges went to Press on November 27, a day before the Report was submitted and gave statements virtually on the same lines as the contents of the Report.”

The judgment has also been assailed on the grounds that the petitioners were not given the opportunity to cross examine all the persons whose statements had been recorded by Commissioner Intelligence. This right, the review petition states, is conferred by the Supreme Court Rules, 2013 and KK Kochunni v. State of Madras, wherein it was laid down that cross examinations can take place in writ petitions.

“The judgment proceeds and relies virtually entirely on the statements of the Learned Judges. It is respectfully submitted that Petitioner Association has never questioned the status and the respect commanded by those Learned Judges. But if they chose to give statements which State of Maharashtra heavily replied upon and which have influenced this Hon’ble Court in its decision making they ought to have been offered for cross examination.”

The review petition goes on to state,
“If the enquiry was ordered as prayed for and if it found that Judge Loya had indeed died of heart attack it would have set all doubts to rest but it would have sent a strong message to the Judiciary and to the country that individuals are willing to stand up for the judiciary and not desert it in time of challenge. As against that if enquiry had found some foul play it would have truly been a great service to the independence and impartiality of Judiciary and its Members…”

Related Articles:
1. 
Even without an investigation, Supreme Court concludes that Judge Loya’s death was natural
2. Heartbreak and Hacking: What happened after the SC dismissed the PIL in the Judge Loya case
 
 

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Heartbreak and Hacking: What happened after the SC dismissed the PIL in the Judge Loya case https://sabrangindia.in/heartbreak-and-hacking-what-happened-after-sc-dismissed-pil-judge-loya-case/ Fri, 20 Apr 2018 08:32:12 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/04/20/heartbreak-and-hacking-what-happened-after-sc-dismissed-pil-judge-loya-case/ On Thursday April 19, 2018, the Indian Supreme Court dismissed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) demanding a Special Investigation Team (SIT) enquiry into the death of Judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya. The judgment drew widespread criticism, given how Judge Loya died under alleged mysterious circumstances. Senior advocate and activist Prashant Bhushan said it was a “black […]

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On Thursday April 19, 2018, the Indian Supreme Court dismissed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) demanding a Special Investigation Team (SIT) enquiry into the death of Judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya. The judgment drew widespread criticism, given how Judge Loya died under alleged mysterious circumstances.

Justice Loya

Senior advocate and activist Prashant Bhushan said it was a “black day”. He tweeted:

Student activist Shehla Rashid raised questions about the competence and credibility of the CBI. She tweeted:

Student leader tirned politician Kanhaiya Kumar too lamented the judgment. He tweeted:

The Congress Party, through AICC Communications Incharge, Randeep Singh Surjewala, issued a Press Release saying, “Congress Party is committed to people’s demand for a fair investigation in the matter surrounding Judge Loya’s death.”

But the drama for the day was far from over. Minutes after the judgment was read out, the Supreme Court website was allegedly hacked by a Brazilian hacker group. This made it difficult for anyone to obtain a copy of the judgment.

Ordinarily, a copy of the judgment is uploaded on the Supreme Court website. However, as the website was not accessible, no one, including the petitioners of the media could access the judgment copy. However, Law Minister Ravishankar Prasad managed to get a certified copy of the judgment before anyone else, much to the chagrin of the petitioners.

The Supreme Court website was restored in the evening. You can read the judgement here.

What the SC said
A three judge bench comprising Chief Justice Dipak Misra, Justice D. Y. Chandrachud and Justice A. M. Khanwilkar that heard the PIL, dismissed it saying, “There is no reason to disbelieve the sequence of events leading to the death as narrated by the four judicial officers namely Shrikant Kulkarni, Shriram Modak, R. Rathi and Vijay Kumar Barde and the assertions of Bombay High Court Justices Bhushan Gawai and Sunil Shukre.” It further admonished the petitioner for attempting to malign the judiciary.

Senior Counsel Dushyant Dave, Indira Jaising and V. Giri had appeared on behalf of the Bombay Lawyers’ Association, Former chief of the navy Admiral L. Ramdas, an intervenor, and Activist Tehseen Poonawalla respectively.

Previous controversy
On January 12, 2018, in an unprecedented move, four sitting judges of the Supreme Court came out and addressed a press conference alleging nepotism in the apex court. They alleged that the Chief Justice was assigning important and controversial cases only to a select few judges. They feared this cherry picking could have an impact on the judgment in these high profile cases, including the case pertaining to Judge Loya’s death.

 

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Even without an investigation, Supreme Court concludes that Judge Loya’s death was natural https://sabrangindia.in/even-without-investigation-supreme-court-concludes-judge-loyas-death-was-natural/ Fri, 20 Apr 2018 04:57:03 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/04/20/even-without-investigation-supreme-court-concludes-judge-loyas-death-was-natural/ The court based its judgement on statements of four judges who were with Brijgopal Loya the day he died, saying they can’t be doubted.   The Supreme Court on Thursday refused to order an independent investigation into the death of Maharashtra judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya, concluding that he had died of a heart attack. A […]

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The court based its judgement on statements of four judges who were with Brijgopal Loya the day he died, saying they can’t be doubted.

Judge Loya
 

The Supreme Court on Thursday refused to order an independent investigation into the death of Maharashtra judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya, concluding that he had died of a heart attack. A three-judge bench led by Chief Justice Dipak Misra reposed absolute faith in the statements of four judges who apparently took Loya to hospital after he complained of chest pain in the early morning of December 1, 2014. Loya was declared dead a few hours later.

At the time, Loya was hearing the Sohrabuddin Sheikh fake encounter case in which Bharatiya Janata Party president Amit Shah was an accused. Shah was acquitted a few weeks later by the judge who took over from Loya.

 

In a 114-page judgement authored by Justice DY Chandrachud, the bench, which also included Justice AM Khanwilkar, slammed the petitioners for coming to the court with ulterior motives, which amounted to tarnishing the image of the judiciary. Political and business rivalries, the court said, should be settled in markets and the electoral field. The petitions were a case of the misuse of public interest litigation, which undermines the judicial process by wasting the time of the court, the judgement said.

The court maintained that in the absence of substantial contradictory evidence, the statements of the four judges cannot be questioned.

Many questions remain unanswered, however, not least because the court failed to address some specific allegations raised by the petitioners on the basis material evidence.

Judges’ statements

The strongest thread running through the judgement is the faith reposed in the statements of the four judges – SM Modak, VC Barde, Shrikant Kulkarni and Roopesh Rathi. The court said contemporaneous material evidence backs the judges’ statements. Although there are minor contradictions, they by and large agree about the sequence of events that took place after Loya complained of chest pain. Loya was first taken to Dande hospital and then to Meditrina, where he was declared brought dead.

The judges’ statements, Chandrachud wrote, “have a ring of truth” to them. “The statements contain matters of detail which would be known to those who were present with Judge Loya,” the judgement noted.

One of the key questions raised by the petitioners was how the four judges had provided their statements so swiftly during a discreet investigation launched by the Maharashtra government after Caravan magazine published two articles raising doubts about the circumstances of Loya’s death on November 20 and 21. The entire investigation was completed in five days. This included seeking permission from the Chief Justice of the Bombay High Court to record the statements of the judges, taking the statements and collating them in the form of a report.

To this, the Supreme Court said the alacrity reflected the sense of duty of the four judges.
 

“The four judicial officers acted responsibly. There was no reason for them either to hasten or to cause a delay in submitting their versions of what they knew. Each of the four judges has acted with a sense of duty. This is how they would be expected to conduct themselves, in answering to a call of duty.”

Another key contention of the petitioners was that two judges of the Bombay High Court – Justices Gavai and Shukre – spoke about the circumstances of Loya’s death to The Indian Express on November 27. Their version matched that of the four judicial officers, raising suspicion of the entire exercise being staged. The petitioners even sought disciplinary action against the two High Court judges.

The Supreme Court dismissed the submission as “preposterous”. The interviews of the High Court judges were published by The Indian Express on November 27, the court said, whereas the statements of the four judges had been taken on November 23 and 24. “We are mentioning this aspect because the line of submissions in this case indicates an unfortunate attempt to use every possible ploy to cast aspersions on members of the district and higher judiciary,” it said.

It is not clear, though, whether the court considered the possibility that the High Court judges and the judicial officers may have spoken between November 20 and November 23, the period between Caravan publishing the first of its two reports and the judicial officers providing their statements.
 

Hospital visits

The petitioners, including Congress member Tehseen Poonawallah, had questioned why Loya was first taken to the smaller Dande hospital when better facilities were available within five kilometers of Ravi Bhavan, the guest house where Loya was staying in Nagpur.
To this, the apex court said it was easy for an observer sitting in an armchair at a distant point in time to assert that wisdom lay in an alternative course of action. “They did their best under the circumstances, acting entirely in good faith,” it said, referring to the judges who took Loya to the hospital.

Saying the four judicial officers were sought to be painted as co-conspirators, the court stated, “We must emphatically reject such attempts on the part of the petitioners and the intervenors to malign judicial officers of the district judiciary.”
 

Question of ECG

One of the main points of contention was whether an ECG was done on Loya at Dande hospital. Of the four judicial officers who were with Loya at the hospital, Rathi had said the ECG machine was broken while Barde had said an ECG was indeed done. As part of its November 27 report, The Indian Express had published a copy of the ECG, but it carried the date as November 30 and not December 1, which is when Loya was taken to the hospital.

The judgement acknowledged the contradiction in the statements of the judges but reasoned that Rathi’s claim should be weighed with the doctor’s notes at Meditrina. It stated:
 

“The death summary specifically adverts to the fact that the patient was taken to Dande hospital earlier where an ECG was done. Dr Dande has made the same statement. The progress notes also note a ‘tall T’ in the anterior lead which indicates that the ECG was seen by the doctors attending to Judge Loya at Meditrina hospital. These progress notes are contemporaneous, since they also form part of the communication addressed by Dr NB Gawande at Meditrina to the PSI at Sitabardi on the same day after the judge had been brought dead to the hospital.”

In fact, the court pointed out, Prashant Bhushan, one of the intervenors, has relied on this ECG for his submissions.

But it should be noted, as reported before, Dr NB Gawande of Meditrina, who signed the medico-legal report, had told Caravan that he did not see the report of the ECG done at Dande till it was brought over the next day. However, the doctor’s progress notes, also prepared on December 1, clearly mentions the Dande hospital’s ECG. Did Gawande sign the medico-legal report without going through the doctor’s progress report?

Though the court dismissed the doubts about the ECG by pointing to its mention in the doctor’s notes at Meditrina, this does not nullify the petitioners’ suspicion about the very authenticity of the ECG report, which is what an independent investigation would have looked into.
In effect, the court overlooked the statement of one judge but relied on the statement of another as well as other documentary evidence that too was disputed by the petitioners. For example, the bill for Loya’s treatment at Meditrina listed charges for dietary consultation and neurosurgery. The court dealt with this aspect in passing, although it was a substantial question.

“The charge for dietary consultation is erroneous,” the judgement said. “But that cannot be a ground to discredit the fact that Judge Loya was taken to Meditrina. That he was taken to Meditrina is clear from the documentary material on the record and the consistent statements of all the four judicial officers.”

The contention about neurosurgery charges was not answered in detail. This is significant because Loya’s family members told Caravan there were bloodstains on his shirt, which the petitioners later argued could be the result of an injury to the head.
 

Family’s statements

The apex court observed that Loya’s family had disassociated from their interviews to Caravan, alleging attempts by Mohit Shah, then Chief Justice of the Bombay High Court, to bribe Loya for a favourable verdict in the Sohrabuddin Sheikh case. The court said:
 

“The video recording of an interview given to Caravan by the father and sister of Judge Loya was also handed over to the court on a pen drive. The members of the family of Judge Loya have disassociated themselves from the statements attributed to them in the Caravan publication. The video recording, which we have seen, contains snippets of an interview. Evidently, only a part of the interview has been produced. The allegations against the Chief Justice of the Bombay High Court are hearsay.”

If the court thought the video was edited, why did it not seek the unedited version from Caravan?

Moreover, that petitioners’ had argued that Loya’s family could have retracted their statements under duress. The court also did not deal in detail with the letter written to Mohit Shah by Anuj Loya, seeking an investigation into his father’s death.
 

Stay in Ravi Bhawan

On the question of whether Loya actually stayed in the government guest house in Nagpur, the court pointed to the visitors registry to conclude a suite had been booked in the name of one of the judges accompanying him. The court accepted the statements of two of the judicial officers that they stayed in the same room with Loya at Ravi Bhawan. It also pointed out that Loya called his wife on the night of November 30 and told her he was staying at the guest house. The court said:
 

“The occupancy register does show that the room was in the name of Judge Kulkarni. His account is that his two friends and colleagues (Judge Loya and Judge Modak) shared the accommodation with him. It is unfair to disbelieve this account of colleagues in the district judiciary. They were friends, known to each other and had stayed together at Ravi Bhavan during the short trip to Nagpur. No counsel has suggested that they were not closely acquainted to each other.”

The court seems to have not taken into account media reports that were published after the judgement was reserved on March 16. In particular, an investigation in Caravan published on March 29 about how staff at Ravi Bhawan had no clue about the happenings of December 1, 2014.
 

‘Scurrilous allegations’

The Supreme Court slammed the petitioners for levelling for what it described as “scurrilous allegations”. It especially took to task lawyers Dushyant Dave and Prashant Bhushan for some of the arguments they had made. About Dave’s plea for cross-examining the four judges, the court said:
 

“By casting unfounded aspersions on the judicial officers who had accompanied Judge Loya, the petitioners have revealed the real motive of these proceedings which is to bring the judiciary into disrepute on the basis of scurrilous allegations. We find no basis or justification to allow the request for cross-examination. The application shall accordingly stand rejected.” 

Bhushan had sent the ECG and other medical records to Dr Upendra Kaul, former head of forensics at the All India Institute of Medical Science in Delhi, and obtained his opinion. The doctor suggested reasons other than heart attack for Loya’s death. The court objected to the manner in which this was done, saying:
 

“Facts have emerged from the record which indicate that a carefully orchestrated attempt has been made during the course of these hearings on behalf of the Centre for Public Interest Litigation to create evidence to cast a doubt on the circumstances leading to the death of Judge Loya. In their practice before this court, Counsel are expected to assist the court with a sense of objectivity in aid of justice. What has happened here is that Mr Prashant Bhushan has adopted a dual mantle, assuming the character of a counsel for the intervenor as well as an individual personally interested on behalf of the intervening organisation of which he is a member. He has gone to the length of personally collecting evidence to somehow bolster the case. This has bordered on an attempt to misrepresent the facts and mislead the court.”

The court reproduced the expert medical opinion obtained by the Maharashtra government that the conclusions in the postmortem report were correct.

The court also spoke about the misuse of public interest litigation, saying the true face behind the litigants is seldom revealed.
 

“At the other end of the spectrum are petitions which have been instituted at the behest of business or political rivals to settle scores behind the facade of a public interest litigation. The true face of the litigant behind the façade is seldom unravelled.”

First published on Scroll.in

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SC dismisses PIL demanding SIT probe into Judge Loya’s death https://sabrangindia.in/sc-dismisses-pil-demanding-sit-probe-judge-loyas-death/ Thu, 19 Apr 2018 06:30:37 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/04/19/sc-dismisses-pil-demanding-sit-probe-judge-loyas-death/ The Supreme Court has dismissed the Public Interest Litigation (PIL) demanding a Special Investigation Team (SIT) enquiry into the death of Judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya. Judge Loya who was presiding over the Sohrabuddin Sheikh case in a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) Court, died in December 2014 under allegedly mysterious circumstances. He has earlier turned […]

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The Supreme Court has dismissed the Public Interest Litigation (PIL) demanding a Special Investigation Team (SIT) enquiry into the death of Judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya. Judge Loya who was presiding over the Sohrabuddin Sheikh case in a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) Court, died in December 2014 under allegedly mysterious circumstances. He has earlier turned down an alleged bribe of Rs 100 crores to pass a judgment in favour of BJP Chief Amit Shah in the case.

Justice Loya

A three judge bench comprising Chief Justice Dipak Misra, Justice D. Y. Chandrachud and Justice A. M. Khanwilkar that heard the PIL, dismissed it saying, “There is no reason to disbelieve the sequence of events leading to the death as narrated by the four judicial officers namely Shrikant Kulkarni, Shriram Modak, R. Rathi and Vijay Kumar Barde and the assertions of Bombay High Court Justices Bhushan Gawai and Sunil Shukre.”

It further admonished the petitioner for attempting to malign the judiciary. Senior Counsel Dushyant Dave, Indira Jaising and V. Giri had appeared on behalf of the Bombay Lawyers’ Association, Former chief of the navy Admiral L. Ramdas, an intervenor, and Activist Tehseen Poonawalla respectively.

Judge Loya was presiding over the case which involved the 2005 ‘encounter’ killing of Sohrabuddin and his wife Kausar Bi. Within a month of Judge Loya’s death, M.B. Gosavi the judge who replaced him ruled that Amit Shah had no case to answer and discharged him from the case saying, “I found substance in the main contention made by the applicant [Mr. Shah] that he was involved in the case by the CBI for political reasons.” Interestingly, Judge Loya had himself taken over the case when the previous judge J.T Utpat suddenly moved out of the trial. Utpat had previously admonished Shah for his failure to appear before the court.

Loya had gone to Nagpur to attend the wedding of the daughter of another judge on November 30, 2014. On the morning of December 1, Loya’s family received a call saying Loya had died following a cardiac arrest. Caravan magazine published interviews with Judge Loya’s family members where they raised several questions about the manner in which his death was handled and that they feared that he may have fallen prey to foul play.

One of the suspicious aspects was that the family had received the call about his death at about 5am, yet the time of death recorded was 6:30am. Another curious aspect was how the hospital had pronounced that Loya died of natural causes, yet an autopsy was conducted. No panchnama was filed, neither was a medico-legal case registered as it required by law. Also the signature on the post mortem belongs to a ‘paternal cousin’, except no such person exists. Moreover, blood was found on Loya’s clothes which is curious because a heart attack does not cause bleeding.

Loya had allegedly complained of chest pains following which he was taken by autorickshaw to Dande Hospital where he was administered some medication. Later he was shifted to Meditrina Hospital as the ECG machine at Dande Hospital was not functioning. But he was declared ‘brought dead’ at Meditrina. Both hospitals are privately owned.

On January 12, 2018, in an unprecedented move, four sitting judges of the Supreme Court came out and addressed a press conference alleging nepotism in the apex court. They alleged that the Chief Justice was assigning important and controversial cases only to a select few judges. They feared this cherry picking could have an impact on the judgment in these high profile cases, including the case pertaining to Judge Loya’s death.
 

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Judge Loya’s Post-Mortem was Manipulated https://sabrangindia.in/judge-loyas-post-mortem-was-manipulated/ Tue, 03 Apr 2018 06:43:07 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/04/03/judge-loyas-post-mortem-was-manipulated/ The Caravan has revealed the old connections between a Doctor in Nagpur and the BJP Image Courtesy: Scroll.in   In a further twist to the death of Judge Loya, The Caravan has reported that there is sufficient evidence that the post-mortem report was manipulated. The report highlighted the political clout behind the post-mortem. The focus […]

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The Caravan has revealed the old connections between a Doctor in Nagpur and the BJP
Image Courtesy: Scroll.in
 
In a further twist to the death of Judge Loya, The Caravan has reported that there is sufficient evidence that the post-mortem report was manipulated. The report highlighted the political clout behind the post-mortem. The focus was on the relation between Dr Makarand Vyawahare – at that time in the Forensic Department in the Government Medical College in Nagpur – and his brother in law the present Finance Minister of Maharashtra, Sudhir Mungantiwar. According to the report Dr Vyawahare constantly reminded his peers and subordinates about his connections. When he was a postgraduate student he allegedly got into a serious disagreement with a Professor. After the argument, the Professor was transferred. Though there is no direct evidence that Dr Vyawahare had anything to do with it, considering that he constantly made people aware of his connections, it is not too farfetched a conclusion.

According to unnamed employees interviewed by The Caravan, Dr Vyawahare arrived unusually early on the day Judge Loya’s corpse was brought in. Which indicates that he must have known beforehand. They mentioned that he was jittery and smoked more than he usually did. He instructed Dr N. K. Tumram on what to write in the report. Dr Vyawahare’s brother in law, Sudhir Mungantiwar was in 1995 the Maharashtra party president of the BJP. He was expected to have become the CM, however, Devendra Fadnavis was later named. The contents of The Caravans article certainly lay bare the extent of the political involvement in the post-mortem.

Dr Tumram’s name appeared on the report, however, Dr Vyawahare’s did not. Persons present at the time stated that for the first time they saw Dr Vyawahare take interest in physically conducting the post-mortem. He ignored the wound on the back of Judge Loya’s head, as well as the other signs that the death was unnatural. Though there was no reason to believe that Judge Loya died from a heart attack, he ensured that the reason for death was recorded as such.

It is not inconceivable that Dr Vyawahare, who is now a member of the Maharashtra Medical Council, was ordered to influence the post-mortem report. Colleagues and subordinates mentioned that he made full use of his contacts. He had manipulated post-mortems as well in the past. This was more common for corpses from his hometown. Often minor changes relating to the time of death were recorded, this according to one employee could potentially alter the outcome of an entire investigation. One incident was mentioned where after opening the stomach of a corpse, a heavy smell of insecticide arose. This was conveniently omitted from the report. If the person had been a farmer, this would have a bearing on how farmer suicides were being recorded. Thus, the relationship that existed was one of a partnership.

Other details such as dates on the report being changed also emerged. It so happened that during the course of the hearings before the Supreme Court, the post-mortem report submitted was missing a page. The Court instructed the page to be produced. The page was however only made available to Tehseen Poonawala and not the other petitioners, the Bombay Lawyer’s Association and Admiral Ramdas. At this stage, it would certainly be in the best interests of the Judiciary to Order an independent investigation into Judge Loya’s death.

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

 

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Death of Judge Loya: Medical Documents Rule Out Heart Attack, Says Leading Forensic Expert https://sabrangindia.in/death-judge-loya-medical-documents-rule-out-heart-attack-says-leading-forensic-expert/ Mon, 12 Feb 2018 09:06:41 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/02/12/death-judge-loya-medical-documents-rule-out-heart-attack-says-leading-forensic-expert/ Caravan magazine spoke to Dr RK Sharma—the former head of the Forensic Medicine and Toxicology Department at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi, and the president of the Indian Association of Medico-Legal Experts After examining medical documents pertaining to the death of the judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya, one of India’s foremost forensic […]

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Caravan magazine spoke to Dr RK Sharma—the former head of the Forensic Medicine and Toxicology Department at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi, and the president of the Indian Association of Medico-Legal Experts

Justice Loya

After examining medical documents pertaining to the death of the judge Brijgopal Harkishan Loya, one of India’s foremost forensic experts, Dr RK Sharma—the former head of the Forensic Medicine and Toxicology Department at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi, and the president of the Indian Association of Medico-Legal Experts for 22 years—has dismissed the official claim that Loya died of a heart attack. According to Sharma, the documents show signs of possible trauma to the brain, and even possible poisoning.

Sharma spoke to The Caravan after studying Loya’s post-mortem report and related histopathology report, a report that accompanied samples of Loya’s viscera that were sent for chemical analysis, and the results of the chemical analysis. Some of these documents have been procured through Right to Information applications, and others have been submitted to the Supreme Court by the government of Maharashtra in support of a report by Maharashtra’s State Intelligence Department that concludes there is no cause for suspicion regarding Loya’s death. Sharma’s expert opinion contradicts this conclusion.

Read the full report here.
 

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Personal Testimony of Admiral Ramdas on Judge Loya’s case https://sabrangindia.in/personal-testimony-admiral-ramdas-judge-loyas-case/ Thu, 01 Feb 2018 05:19:38 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/02/01/personal-testimony-admiral-ramdas-judge-loyas-case/ To Whom It May Concern   So Why Am I filing a Writ Petition and PIL on the Judge Loya case? How and Why am I concerned?    1.       I have always been and remain a great believer in and follower of the Constitution of India which guarantees independence of the Executive, the […]

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To Whom It May Concern
 
Admiral Ramdas

So Why Am I filing a Writ Petition and PIL on the Judge Loya case? How and Why am I concerned?

  
1.       I have always been and remain a great believer in and follower of the Constitution of India which guarantees independence of the Executive, the Legislature and the Judiciary.
 
2.       The Constitution guarantees every citizen various freedoms, including the freedom of speech, freedom to practice the religion of their choice, and Right to life.
 
3.       Several events in the years since Independence have been indelibly imprinted on my mind from the time that I witnessed at close quarters, the horrors of Partition as a young lad growing up in Delhi in the 1940s. To mention a few – the ruthless slaying and pogrom let lose against the Sikhs in 1984; the inexplicable destruction of places of worship including the Babri Masjid in 1992 , and the deliberate killing of large numbers of Muslims in Gujarat in 2002. I continue to watch with mounting dismay, the current and continuous violations of basic human rights, attacks on minorities – especially Muslims and Dalits, and the systematic weakening and debilitation of all our established institutions, including the judiciary. As we
 
celebrate the 68th anniversary of our Republic– each of these events listed above, represents a serious violation of the Constitution, for which I hold the Governments of the day accountable. It is certainly a time to take serious stock of where we have reached and how do we make the necessary course corrections before it is too late.
 
4.       I retired as Chief of the Naval Staff in 1993 after 45 years in the service of the Nation. I moved soon thereafter tolive in a small village, Bhaimala, in rural Maharashtra. I have constantly and continuously maintained a critical position about these continuing attempts to undermine and weaken the Constitution and the Democratic framework of the country, and how these affect the most marginalised. I have never hesitated in expressing my views and my unhappiness at these developments in unequivocal terms. These have often taken the form of letters addressed to the topmost leadership in the country .
 
5.       These include one written in October 2015 to the then President and the Prime Minister – expressing my shock at the series of events taking place around the country; then one in 2017 to Shri Ram Nath Kovind jee, the Honorable President and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, soon after his election , concerning the growing intolerance and deteriorating civil military relations among other matters.
 
6.       The latest letter was written by me to the CJI and the CJ – Bombay High Court, written in November 2017, raising my concerns about the mysterious circumstances surrounding the death of Judge Loya , as outlined in the Caravan Magazine in Nov 2017. This was mainly to urge the Chief Justice of India and the Chief Justice of Bombay High Court to constitute a high level Judicial Enquiry /SIT into the matter and to thus restore public confidence in the image of the judiciary and the highest court in the land – ie the Supreme Court.
 
7.       I have been motivated primarily by an abiding consciousness of my duties as a citizen of India and a proud member of our Armed Forces. I have always sought to communicate my views and disquiet on matters of state, directly to the leadership of our nation from time to time, or whenever, in my perception, we seem to be losing our way and moving away from the broad pathway or Dharma as laid down in the Constitution – which has always been my guiding light.
 
8.       So it is in this present case. I have already written expressing my strong discomfort at the series of disclosures and conflicting versions regarding Judge Loya’s sudden and untimely death. The recent Press conference by four of the senior most Judges of the SC only confirmed my own fears that all was not well – and therefore this writ, as a Public interest Litigation, seeking the Courts Directive to set up a high level judicial Enquiry under the direct monitoring of the SC. I am hoping that by so doing, I would add further weightage to the pleas already made , to inquire into this matter without further delay and further damage to our institutions.
 
9.       I am sharing my reasons for taking this action of seeking direction from the Highest Court in the land, primarily to allay possible allegations of vested interests that might have motivated me. I am 84 years old – and have been keeping indifferent health. I could just as well have kept silent and enjoyed my retirement. However, do I feel deeply that each of us has a duty and a responsibility to work towards realising the dream of building an open, tolerant, inclusive and diverse India – as envisioned in that great document -the Indian Constitution.
 
10.   My experience as a Lok Pal. It was this belief that led me to accept the responsibility of the role of Lok Pal of the Aam Aadmi Party from its inception till I was no longer required ! In keeping with my principled notion that such a role required complete and uncompromising objectivity and non partisan functioning, I never became a member of AAP or any other political party.
 
11.   I have never held a post retirement paid post – either in Government nor in any private for profit entity. I live primarily on my pension and interest on my few savings – and this has enabled me to play the role of an independent voice and critic without any fear or favour. Born in Mumbai; domiciled in Maharashtra; I am perhaps one of the few retired Former Chiefs who continues to live on the land allotted to me for my gallantry award of Vir Chakra after the 1971 operations.
 
12.   My wife and I have cultivated what was banjar land, and we continue to learn about organic farming and the struggles of our rural and farming community – the greatest education we could have had. For nearly twenty five years, we have worked with local communities and children in a number of educational activities ; have led struggles against take over of irrigated farmlands. We have both been deeply involved with work for Peace – in our region, especially with Pakistan, and for a Nuclear free India, a Nuclear free Asia and Nuclear Free World.
 Laxminarayan [Ramu] Ramdas
 
(Admiral Ramdas filed a petition in the Supreme Court on January 30, 2018 asking the Suprme Court to investigate the death of Judge Loya and the curcumstances around it)

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Judiciary has to Stand Up and Protect it’s Independence: Indira Jaising https://sabrangindia.in/judiciary-has-stand-and-protect-its-independence-indira-jaising/ Wed, 17 Jan 2018 07:42:25 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/01/17/judiciary-has-stand-and-protect-its-independence-indira-jaising/ Indira Jaising at the All India People’s Forum Press Meet, talked about the  urgency of the probe on Justice Loya’s death. Judge Loya was hearing the politically sensitive Sohrabuddin Sheikh police encounter case in which BJP President Amit Shah was one of the accused.   Courtesy: Newsclick.in

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Indira Jaising at the All India People’s Forum Press Meet, talked about the  urgency of the probe on Justice Loya’s death. Judge Loya was hearing the politically sensitive Sohrabuddin Sheikh police encounter case in which BJP President Amit Shah was one of the accused.

 

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

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