Courts must call reports on mitigating factors in potential death penalty cases: Apex court, Pg13
Supreme Court mandates trial courts to consider mitigating factors in death penalty cases, ensuring comprehensive reports and effective legal representation.
The Supreme Court has issued nationwide directions for trial courts to consider mitigating circumstances in potential death penalty cases.
Trial courts must call for reports on aggravating and mitigating circumstances after conviction but before sentencing.
High Courts must mandatorily call for such reports if the trial court has not done so, at the stage of admission of the death reference.
The court stayed the death sentence of a man in Bihar's Buxar jail, allowing a Mitigation Investigation Report to be submitted.
Detailed Insights:
The Supreme Court emphasized that reformation is a foundational goal of criminal punishment, necessitating consideration of mitigating factors.
The court noted that the absence of a structured framework and inadequate prison reforms have hampered the system's ability to achieve genuine rehabilitation.
Delayed consideration of mitigating factors undermines a balanced sentencing process and impedes the application of reformative principles.
The court directed that Legal Services Committees must assign a dedicated legal team to represent convicts in every death sentence confirmation reference, regardless of private counsel.
The quality of defence afforded to the accused often remains inadequate, resulting in ineffective legal representation at crucial stages of the proceedings, which the court seeks to remedy.
Key Concepts Involved:
Mitigating Circumstances: Factors that reduce the severity of a crime, potentially leading to a lighter sentence.
Aggravating Circumstances: Factors that increase the severity of a crime, potentially leading to a harsher sentence.
Death Reference: Confirmation of a death sentence by a higher court, typically a High Court.