[Torture is “rampant” in the criminal justice system and the legal aid
system is unsatisfactory, 60 former Supreme Court judges have revealed
according to a study that attempts to understand “judicial thought and
adjudicatory processes” that govern the administration of death penalty in
India. The report, ‘Matters of Judgment’ — published by the Centre on the
Death Penalty at National Law University, Delhi — delves into three issues:
investigative and trial processes, sentencing in death penalty cases and
judicial attitudes towards death penalty.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/india/torture-widespread-legal-aid-system-unsatisfactory-sc-ex-judges-in-study-4974598/

Torture widespread, legal aid system unsatisfactory: SC ex-judges in study
Fourteen judges felt that wrongful convictions were a direct result of
improper investigation; while 13 said that susceptibility of the criminal
justice system to power, money and corruption was the main reason behind
wrongful convictions.

By: Express News Service | New Delhi | Published: December 9, 2017 3:22 am

On wrongful convictions, 43 out of the 49 respondents acknowledged the
possibility and six judges denied it (Representational Image)

Torture is “rampant” in the criminal justice system and the legal aid
system is unsatisfactory, 60 former Supreme Court judges have revealed
according to a study that attempts to understand “judicial thought and
adjudicatory processes” that govern the administration of death penalty in
India. The report, ‘Matters of Judgment’ — published by the Centre on the
Death Penalty at National Law University, Delhi — delves into three issues:
investigative and trial processes, sentencing in death penalty cases and
judicial attitudes towards death penalty.

On investigative and trial processes, the study states that 38 judges (out
of 39 who responded to this question) acknowledged that “torture was
rampant” in India’s criminal justice system, while one said that it does
not happen at all. Twelve judges justified the use of torture, citing
reasons such as an overburdened police force; and 17 of them said that
torture is unacceptable and does not work. “Torture is the worst human
rights violation,” a former Chief Justice of India who served as an
appellate judge for 26 years is quoted in the study as saying.

On wrongful convictions, 43 out of the 49 respondents acknowledged the
possibility and six judges denied it. Fourteen judges felt that wrongful
convictions were a direct result of improper investigation; while 13 said
that susceptibility of the criminal justice system to power, money and
corruption was the main reason behind wrongful convictions.

The study says that when asked about abolition/retention of the death
penalty in India, 29 former judges identified abolitionist justifications,
39 identified retentionist justifications, 14 retentionist judges took the
position that there was no reason to consider abolition in India.
“Death penalty has to be retained because the law is still there. It is up
to Parliament to take it away but according to me it would be too dangerous
to abolish the death penalty as I say there are many kinds of criminals,
some of them are bloodthirsty and cannot be reformed,” a judge was quoted
as saying. According to the study, not a single judge found the legal aid
system satisfactory. It states that 14 judges acknowledged that poor legal
representation disproportionately impacts the poor.

“I’m worried about unmerited convictions… A criminal jurisprudence can
afford to have a guilty person escape but not have an innocent person
proven guilty,” a judge is quoted in the report. On sentencing in death
penalty cases, the report says that “some judges” felt that “rape and
murder of a minor” would fall in the “category” of the rarest of rare,
others felt the requirements of the “rarest of rare doctrine would be
satisfied on the existence of certain aggravating circumstances such as the
number or nature of the victims”.

The report says, “It was evident that there existed no uniform
understanding of the requirements of the ‘rarest of rare’ doctrine and this
gave rise to serious concerns of judge-centric sentencing.”
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Peace Is Doable

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