The Supreme Court on Friday allowed the premature release plea of Rohit Chaturvedi, one of the convicts in the 2003 murder case of poet Madhumita Shukla. The Court held that the Union Ministry of Home Affairs had wrongly rejected the recommendation made by the Uttarakhand government for his remission and premature release.
The Bench of Justice BV Nagarathna and Justice Ujjal Bhuyan observed that the communication issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) on July 9, 2025, was arbitrary, non-speaking and legally unsustainable. The Apex Court quashed the decision and allowed Chaturvedi’s writ petition seeking remission.
It also considered the fact that Chaturvedi had already undergone more than 22 years of incarceration and noted that he was presently out of custody. In view of the order granting remission, the Bench directed that he would not be required to surrender before prison authorities.
While dealing with the principles governing remission and premature release, the Court reiterated the reformative approach of criminal jurisprudence. It emphasised that the criminal justice system must balance punishment with rehabilitation and reintegration of convicts into society. Referring to the philosophy of reformative justice, the Bench observed that prolonged incarceration should not defeat the possibility of reformation where the conduct of the prisoner indicates rehabilitation.
The case relates to the murder of poet Madhumita Shukla, who was shot dead at her residence in Lucknow on May 9, 2003, while she was seven months pregnant. The investigation was subsequently transferred to the Central Bureau of Investigation. According to the prosecution case, the murder was executed pursuant to a criminal conspiracy allegedly involving former Uttar Pradesh minister Amarmani Tripathi, his wife Madhumani Tripathi, Rohit Chaturvedi and others. The CBI alleged that Chaturvedi had facilitated the murder by arranging assailants to eliminate the victim.
In 2007, a trial court in Dehradun convicted Amarmani Tripathi, Madhumani Tripathi, Rohit Chaturvedi and Santosh Kumar Rai for offences including murder and criminal conspiracy, and sentenced them to life imprisonment. The convictions and sentences were later upheld by the Uttarakhand High Court in 2012 and subsequently affirmed by the Supreme Court.
The issue of remission had remained pending before the apex court due to a dispute regarding the competent government authorised to decide the plea after transfer of the criminal trial from Uttar Pradesh to Uttarakhand. Earlier this year, the Supreme Court had directed the Uttarakhand government and the Union government to take a final decision on Chaturvedi’s remission application within a stipulated time frame.
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