HIGH COURT OF KERALA
K VINOD CHANDRAN, C. JAYACHANDRAN, JJ
RAJEEV – Appellant
Versus
STATE OF KERALA – Respondent
JUDGMENT
Vinod Chandran, J.
Abject failure of the prosecution is the bane of criminal judicial administration and the instant case is a classic example. A minor child was subjected to repeated sexual abuse over a period of time by a group of persons who were close acquaintances. The defence is also of consent, for reason of the child being above sixteen, a permissible legal ground, as the Indian Penal Code stood at that point of time. The Court split up the trial of the offences, looking at Section 219 (1) of the Criminal Procedure Code (Cr.PC), with over emphasis on the period of one year, within which three offences of the same kind could be clubbed together; without paying attention to the fact that Sections 218 to 220 speaks of the offences committed by one single person and not different accused, as also ignoring the definition of offences of the same kind as available in sub-ction (2) of .
2. The accused, numbering seven, arrayed in a single final report was charged separately of some offences and others, charged together. The offences were committed by different accused, in the course of almost two years. The Final Report of the police itself split up the offences as commit
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