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Chota Rajan gets life for J Dey murder


ChhotaRajanconvicted in J Dey Murder Case

JyotirmoyDey was the Editor (Investigations) of Midday Eveninger. He was shot dead on June 11, 2011, near his residence in Mumbai.

 

THE INDIA OBSERVER

Mumbai May 2:

Nearly seven years after veteran crime journalist JyotirmoyDey was gunned down in suburban Mumbai, a Mumbai court on Wednesdayconvicted don Chhota Rajan and eight others in the sensational case and sentenced them to life imprisonment.
The special Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) court, however, acquitted former journalist JignaVora, who was charged with instigating Rajan to carry out the killing. The judge also acquitted Paulson Joseph, who was accused of handling the financial operations concerned with the conspiracy.
Vora broke down in the court soon after her acquittal was announced by the judge.
Rajan, who was witnessing proceedings from New Delhi’s Tihar jail via video conferencing, said “theekhai” (alright) when the judge read out the sentence and asked the gangster if he wanted to say anything.
This is the first major conviction for Rajan since he was deported to India following his arrest at Bali airport in Indonesia in 2015.
Judge Sameer Adkar was likely to award the sentence to the convicts in the J Dey case later on Wednesday. The prosecution has demanded the maximum punishment for the convicts, saying that J Dey was a journalist, who represented the fourth pillar of democracy.
Dey, 56, was shot by two motorcycle-borne men on June 11, 2011, in suburban Powai when he was on his way to his residence.
At that time, he worked as a senior editor for the tabloid Mid-Day.
According to the prosecution, the killing was carried out at the behest of Rajan, who was purportedly “unhappy” with the negative reports that Dey had been writing on his health and his diminishing clout in the underworld.
A total of 12 persons were arrested in the case, including Rajan, Satish Joseph alias Satish Kalya, the shooter, and Vora.
According to the prosecution, Vora, who was out on bail during the pendency of the trial, had been in constant touch with Rajan before the incident.
The CBI, in its charge sheet, had claimed that Vora complained to Rajan about Dey, and instigated him to execute the conspiracy to kill him.
The accused were booked under various sections of the Indian Penal Code pertaining to murder (302), criminal conspiracy (120(b)) and destruction of evidence (204), and under provisions of the stringent MCOCA and the Arms Act.
All the nine persons convicted in the case will face a sentence under the MCOCA and IPC section 302 — which imposes the maximum punishment of death penalty. they are also liable to pay a fine under IPC section 302.
Defense advocates urged the court to show leniency towards the convicts on several grounds such as their age, that some of them had young children, or ailing parents to take care of.
They also argued that the present case could not fall into the category of the ‘rarest of rare’ — an essential factor to warrant the death penalty under the IPC Section 302.
The prosecutor, PradeepGharat, however, argued that rarest of rare or not, the fact remained that the nine persons had been convicted under Section 302 and faced either the death penalty or imprisonment for life.
He said the court while sentencing them, must keep in mind that it needed to send out a “strong message”.
He also urged the court to award “some part” of the fine imposed upon the convicts to Dey’s sister to help her.Gharat claimed that Dey’s sister suffered from “some illness” and that the monetary assistance would help her live a better life.
“The victim was a journalist and represented the fourth pillar of our democracy. A journalist was attacked for doing his job, and astringent note must be taken of this fact by the court. A strong message needs to be sent out to the public,” Gharat said.
Besides Rajan, the others convicted in the case are SatishKaliya, Anil Waghmode, Abhijit Shinde, NileshShendge, Arun Dake, MangeshAgawane, Sachin Gaikwad and Deepak Sisodia.

Shirin Abbas

Dr. Shirin Abbas is the Bureau Chief "TheIndiaObserver.Com". She is a world-renowned journalist, winner of several national and international awards for her contribution to Media Research.The first recipient of the prestigious British Chevening Scholarship for Print Journalism in 1999 from her state of Uttar Pradesh. Under the same, she studied at the School of Media, Communication, and Design at the University Of Westminster, London and interned with The Irish Times, Dublin. She has been a journalist for over three decades, working at several national English dailies in North India. She completed her PhD. in Mass Communication in 2016.

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