This story is from November 10, 2014

Verdict on former railway minister murder case today

A trial court here is likely to pronounce its verdict on a case relating to the murder of former railway minister LN Mishra at a function in Bihar nearly 40 years ago on Monday.
Verdict on former railway minister murder case today
NEW DELHI: A trial court here is likely to pronounce its verdict on a case relating to the murder of former railway minister LN Mishra at a function in Bihar nearly 40 years ago on Monday.
The case relates to the bomb blast at the function attended by Mishra at Samastipur Railway Station on January 2, 1975. He was injured in the blast and died the next day.
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Advocate Ranjan Dwivedi who was 24-year-old at that time was named as an accused along with four Ananda Marga group members, one of whom has died.
The court had reserved the verdict on September 12 and had fixed the case for November 10 after hearing the final arguments. The final arguments had begun in September, 2012. Over 200 witnesses including 161 prosecution witnesses and more than 40 defence witnesses were examined in the case. Apart from Dwivedi, three other accused in the case are Santoshananda Avadhuta, Sudevananda Avadhuta and Gopalji.
The accused had earlier approached the Supreme Court for quashing of the trial against them in the murder case. The apex court had on August 17, 2012 dismissed their pleas on the ground that the proceedings could not be quashed merely because they had not been concluded in the last 37 years.
The chargesheet in the case was filed on November 1, 1977 in a CBI court in Patna. The case was shifted to Delhi in 1979 on a plea by the then Attorney General to the apex court.

Except Gopalji, all those listed in the chargesheet in the Mishra murder case were also named as accused in an attempt to murder case related to the bid on the life of then Chief Justice of India AN Ray in Delhi on March 20, 1975. Santoshananda and Sudevananda were made accused in the Justice Ray case on the basis of a confessional statement of Vikram who had turned an approver for CBI. While Santoshananda and Sudevananda were awarded 10 years rigorous imprisonment (RI) each, Dwivedi was sentenced to four years RI by the trial court in the attempt to murder case.
The convicts had challenged their conviction on the ground that Vikram had retracted from his confession. The Delhi High Court in August had upheld the conviction and sentence of Santoshananda and Sudevananda in the attempt to murder case but acquitted Dwivedi in the case.
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