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This is an archive article published on April 21, 2015

Hit-and-run case: Arguments over, court to give date of verdict today

Actor Salman Khan faces charge of culpable homicide not amounting to murder.

salman khan, hit and run case, hit and run, salman khan hit and run, hit n run, hit n run case, salman, salman khan cases, salman khan court, salman, actor salman khan, salman khan controversies, entertainment news While Salman Khan’s lawyer argued that the evidence of eyewitness Ravindra Patil should not be accepted because he passed away and was not available for cross-examination, the prosecution said ample opportunity had been given to defence earlier for cross examining this witness.

On the concluding day of arguments in actor Salman Khan’s hit-and-run trial on Monday, the defence claimed the prosecution had wrongly accused the actor while it was his driver who was at the wheel when the accident took place.

(Read: Salman Khan hit-and-run case: Verdict to be announced on May 6)

The sessions court hearing the case will declare the date of verdict on April 21.

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In 2013, a sessions court had ordered a fresh trial in the case after the charge against Salman Khan was enhanced from “rash and negligent driving” to the more serious culpable homicide not amounting to murder under Section 304(II) of the Indian Penal Code, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in jail.

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On Monday, Salman Khan’s lawyer Shrikant Shivade argued that the evidence of the actor’s deceased police bodyguard Ravindra Patil should not be accepted because he was no more and so could not be cross-examined.

Patil, who was also the complainant in the case, had stated that the actor was in an inebriated condition when he rammed his Toyota Land Cruiser into a bakery in suburban Bandra on September 28, 2002, killing one and injuring four others.

The lawyer said when the enhanced charge was applied to Salman Khan’s case, Patil could not be cross-examined, causing “prejudice to Khan”. The prosecution argued that ample opportunity had been given to defence earlier for cross-examining Patil.

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Claiming that the mishap was a pure accident, Shivade said the tyre burst, which led to the accident, was not in anybody’s control.

Meanwhile, Judge D W Deshpande, on a plea of Salman Khan’s lawyer, issued contempt of court notices Monday to an inspector of Bandra police station for recreating the crime scene and to two city newspapers for publishing photographs of the same.

The special public prosecutor, Pradeep Gharat, through a notice, has also asked the inspector to state reasons as to why he was not informed about the same.

The newspapers had on Sunday carried news and photos showing a police team from Bandra police station driving in a vehicle from J W Marriott Hotel in Juhu to the accident spot to prove that it takes 30 minutes to cover this distance of around 8 km, and not five minutes, as claimed by Salman Khan’s lawyer.

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On April 18, the defence lawyer had produced videos in court, including an interactive Google map, showing the entire journey from Marriott to the accident spot and another video of a truck accident due to a tyre burst, to support his case during his final arguments.

The prosecutor had told the court that he would also present, in video form, his case.

On Monday, however, the prosecutor told the court that he was not informed about the inspector’s actions.

mumbai.newsline@expressindia.com

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