Regional
Goa governor urged not to pardon MLA
Panaji: The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and government employees on Tuesday petitioned Goa Governor Mridula Singh, asking her not to approve the cabinet’s decision to pardon former minister Francisco Mickky Pacheco.
Pacheco, a legislator, is currently serving a six-month sentence for assaulting a government servant.
The Goa Government Employees Association (GGEA) in its petition to Sinha expressed fears that if Pacheco is pardoned despite assaulting a government servant, then officials “who go strictly by the rule books will be slapped, kicked and abused if they do not listen to the orders of elected representatives”.
“There will be lawlessness in the state of Goa as far as government servants are concerned,” president of the association John Nazareth said in the petition.
He also called the cabinet’s decision to seek pardon for the Nuvem legislator a regressive one.
Goa’s deputy chief minister Francis D’Souza has also called the act of slapping a government servant a “minor offence” while justifying the cabinet decision to pardon Pacheco.
The state cabinet in an unprecedented and unanimous decision on July 29 had resolved to grant pardon to Pacheco, a former Archives and Archaeology minister, who is currently serving a six-month sentence for assaulting a junior engineer of the state electricity department.
The cabinet’s decision has been sent to Goa Governor Mridula Sinha for assent.
Under Article 161 of the constitution, a governor of a state has the power to pardon suspend, remit or commute sentences in certain cases.
The assault case was booked in 2006 but Pacheco was sentenced to six months imprisonment, only after the Supreme Court upheld the lower court’s verdict earlier this year.
The AAP argued in its petition that the pardon would set a dangerous precedent of elected representatives using the same route to escape penal punishment.
“If this pardon is granted on the basis that Pacheco is an MLA and has responsibilities to his constituents, it would be the biggest threat to the rule of law, implying that law makers themselves are above the law,” AAP spokesperson Valmiki Naik said in his petition to Sinha.
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What monkey fled with a bag containing evidence in it: Read full story
The court, generally, considers a person who commit a crime and the one who destroys the evidence, as criminals in the eyes of law. But what if an animal destroys the evidence of a crime committed by a human.
In a peculiar incident in Rajasthan, a monkey fled away with the evidence collected by the police in a murder case. The stolen evidence included the murder weapon (a blood-stained knife).
The incident came to light when the police appeared before the court and they had to provide the evidence in the hearing.
The hearing was about the crime which took place in September 2016, in which a person named Shashikant Sharma died at a primary health center under Chandwaji police station. After the body was found, the deceased’s relatives blocked the Jaipur-Delhi highway, demanding an inquiry into the matter.
Following the investigation, the police had arrested Rahul Kandera and Mohanlal Kandera, residents of Chandwaji in relation to the murder. But, when the time came to produce the evidence related to the case, it was found that the police had no evidence with them because a monkey had stolen it from them.
In the court, the police said that the knife, which was the primary evidence, was also taken by the monkey. The cops informed that the evidence of the case was kept in a bag, which was being taken to the court.
The evidence bag contained the knife and 15 other important evidences. However, due to the lack of space in the malkhana, a bag full of evidence was kept under a tree, which led to the incident.