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SHAMEFUL CONVICTION RATES
India Today
|December 01, 2025
ACQUITTALS IN SENSATIONAL CASES HIGHLIGHT A CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM BUCKLING UNDER STRUCTURAL FAILURES
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On a dark November evening, a thin, grey-ing man stepped out of Luksar Jail in Greater Noida. Masked and clutching a small cloth bag, he walked into a world that had once demanded his death. This was Surinder Koli—long cast as a ‘monster’ and a ‘man-eater’. For nearly two decades, he remained imprisoned for the 2006 Nithari killings, a case that horrified the country after skeletal remains of children and women surfaced in a drain behind the Noida bungalow of businessman Moninder Singh Pandher, Koli’s employer. Allegations of serial murder, necrophilia and cannibalism fuelled a media frenzy, and police charged both men with luring, raping, killing and dismembering at least 16 victims.
Between 2009 and 2017, Koli was convicted in 13 separate trials and sentenced to death each time; Pandher received two death sentences. But the foundation of the case gradually crumbled. In October 2023, the Allahabad High Court acquitted Koli in 12 cases and Pandher in both of his, calling the investigation “botched-up”, “casual” and “perfunctory”. On November 11 this year, the Supreme Court struck down Koli’s final remaining conviction, reiterating that “suspicion, however grave, cannot substitute proof”. With that, the Nithari case collapsed.
Koli’s release has reopened an uncomfortable truth: India’s most sensational criminal cases are increasingly falling apart under judicial scrutiny. On July 21, the Bombay High Court overturned the convictions of 12 men in the 2006 Mumbai serial train blasts. Five had been on death row. The court held that the prosecution had “utterly failed” to prove the case. Ten days later, a special court acquitted all seven accused in the 2008 Malegaon bomb blast case, including former BJP MP Pragya Singh Thakur and Lieutenant Colonel Prasad Purohit. Seventeen years after the attack, which killed six people near a mosque during Ramzan, the judge concluded that there was only “strong suspicion”, but no proof.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 01, 2025-Ausgabe von India Today.
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