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Court commuted the death penalty given to a man convicted for murdering his parents and awarded life imprisonment without remission.
The Calcutta High Court recently commuted the death sentence given to a man for murdering his parents and awarded him a life sentence instead without remission.
The division bench of Justice Debangsu Basak and Justice Shabbar Rashidi observed that a constitutional court can award a life sentence without any remission.
The court said, “The Constitutional Court can award a life sentence without any remission. This aspect has to be considered in light of the report of Pavlov Hospital taken note of by the learned Trial Judge where such hospital had done a psychometric assessment of the convict by a clinical psychologist who reported that there was a possibility of the convict committing a future crime and becoming a danger to the society.”
While commuting the sentence, the court considered the following:
The bench relied on the Supreme Court's ruling in Union of Indian v. V. Sriharan @ Murugan and Others in which it was determined that only the High Court and the Supreme Court have the authority to impose a modified punishment providing for a specific term of incarceration or until the end of the convict's life as an alternative to the death penalty.
Accordingly, court commuted the convict's death sentence to life imprisonment without the possibility of remission, noting that the psychometric assessment of the convict by a clinical psychologist indicated that the convict may commit future crimes and become a danger to society.
Case Title: State of West Bengal vs. Sovan Sarkar
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