Valuable piece of evidence lost due to improper investigations: Special court in Samjhauta case

Press Trust of India  |  Panchkula (Haryana) 

A special court which had acquitted and three others in the train blast case Thursday said the National Investigating Agency lost a valuable piece of evidence by not conducting an identification parade.

All the four accused -- alias Swami Aseemanand, Lokesh Sharma, and -- were acquitted by the court here on March 20.

The judgement in the case was made public Thursday.

Sixty-eight people, mostly from Pakistan, were killed in February 2007 in the blast on the India-train near Panipat in

The pointed to several "gaping holes" in the prosecution's case.

He said, as per the prosecution's case, the covers of suitcases with the unexploded improvised bombs were bought from Kothari market in Indore, and found to have been stitched by a tailor there.

The said "very strangely" the agency did not a get an identification parade of suspects conducted to establish this.

"Thus the investigating agency has lost a very valuable piece of evidence by not conducting investigation properly in this regard," the judgment said.

The jude said the identification parade "might have given some vital clue about real culprits involved in the crime".

"However, the same has not been done for the reasons best known to the investigation agency," the judge said.

The judge recalled that the NIA submitted that during investigation it learned through that one of the accused was in Kothari market area on February 14, 2007.

The agency also submitted that call records of Sunil Joshi, and Aseemanand showed the links between the suspects during February-March, 2007.

But, the judge added, the call details of any mobile phone or any other evidence related to the ownership of any mobile phone by the suspects were not brought on record.

The judge said the prosecution had examined a witness who said he was on board the

According to the witness, the train started from around 10.50 pm and after about 10 minutes stopped for some time.

The witness said somebody was saying that some persons had got down from the general coaches, "meaning thereby that some suspects are stated to have de-boarded the train after start of journey", according to the judgment.

"However, there is no investigation on this aspect and in fact as per version put forth by the investigating agency, none of the accused persons travelled in the train and the accused had allegedly planted explosives in the train at the platform of the Old Railway Station and escaped then and there," the judge said.

He said the testimony of a witness goes diametrically opposite to such version of the investigating agency.

"Admittedly, the present case is based on circumstantial evidence and it is settled law that all circumstance must form a complete chain in order to rule out innocence of the accused persons or culpability of persons other than the accused," the judge said.

He said there was no evidence regarding any meeting of minds between the accused to commit the crime. No concrete oral, documentary or scientific evidence was brought on record to connect the accused, facing the trial, with the crime in question, he said.

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First Published: Thu, March 28 2019. 20:30 IST