Supreme Court adjourns Rajiv Gandhi case convict Perarivalan’s bail plea
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The Supreme Court on Tuesday adjourned by three weeks the listening to of a plea for bail filed by Rajiv Gandhi assassination case convict A.G. Perarivalan, who stated that the “stalemate” over his launch from jail was “completely political”.
A Vacation Bench of Justices Vineet Saran and Dinesh Maheshwari was knowledgeable that the petitioner aspect had circulated a letter for adjournment of the case. Advocate Ashok Panigrahi, showing for the Union of India, instructed the courtroom in regards to the adjournment letter. Advocate Joseph Aristotle represented the State of Tamil Nadu within the case.
“After sleeping over for five years in the Article 161 (pardon) petition and sitting over the recommendation of the State Cabinet to release the petitioner for more than a good two-and-a-half years, the Union of India, on February 4, has filed an affidavit [in the Supreme Court] stating that Governor has sent the petition to the President, whereas the law is clear that Governor does not have independent discretion,” Perarivalan, represented by advocates Prabu Ramasubramanian and K. Paari Vendhan, has contended within the bail software.
The bail software stated Perarivalan had been “under the hangman’s noose for 16 years and 29 years in solitary confinement out of the total 30 years of incarceration”.
He has suffered the ache and trauma of the demise row syndrome. “The pain was equally felt by his ageing and fragile parents due to the uncertainty between life and death, and hope and despair,” the appliance stated.
Perarivalan was allowed parole solely twice in 30 years. “There was not a single untoward incident, breach of condition or misconduct during the parole,” the appliance identified.
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