Man sentenced to time served, fine for harbouring man who fired at cop

Update: 2021-12-17 19:12 GMT

New Delhi: A Delhi court on Friday showed leniency towards a man who pleaded guilty for harbouring Shahrukh Pathan, who had absconded after allegedly pointing a gun at a policeman during the northeast Delhi riots last year, and sentenced him to a period already undergone by him in the jail.

Additional Sessions Judge Amitabh Rawat said convict Kaleem Ahmed showed remorse, prayed for leniency and pleaded having been misled by Pathan.

He said while the maximum sentence that can be awarded is three years, the convict has already suffered imprisonment from March 17, 2020 to September 7, 2021.

"Considering family status of convict, his whole individual position, the factum of his voluntary plea of guilt and the fact that his apparent act of contrition deserves to be taken at face value to give another chance to him to reform himself and considering his role and the offence, the convict is sentenced to the period already undergone by him and also to a fine of Rs 2,000, the judge ordered.

"The court, indubitably, regards the action/conduct of the convict Kaleem Ahmed as reprehensible and indictable. The investigation and evidence collected by the Crime Branch, Delhi Police, so far as the convict is concerned, is praiseworthy, he added.

This is the first sentencing in any of the February 2020 riots cases. Ahmed was convicted for the offence under Section 216 IPC (harbouring an offender who has escaped from custody) of IPC on December 7 after he pleaded guilty.

During the arguments, advocate Bilal Khan, representing the 29-year-old convict, apprised the court that Ahmed is poor, sole bread-earner, has nine dependents, the father is paralysed, and that he has already served one-and-a-half years in jail.

Ahmed, who was a motor mechanic by profession, also submitted that he was misled by Pathan.

Special Public Prosecutor Anuj Handa, representing the police, had however prayed for a maximum sentence of three years.

Similar News

Govt promotes 618 employees