New Delhi: Delhi Court on Saturday which was given a two-day two-day guarantee to a man who was awarded the term seven-year prison to damage evidence in the case of Fire Cinema Upaar 1997 who had claimed 59 lives, no member of the old man in Indonesia Family to make Setting for his niece’s engagement ceremony.
Antil Anil Judge’s additional session provided assistance to Dinesh Chand Sharma, a former court staff, sent to prison along with Baron Real Estate Sushil and Gopal Ansal and others by the Masters Court earlier this month.
Relief was given to the Sharma application that claimed that there were no elderly male members in the family to make arrangements for the scheduled ceremony and he was released for a limited seven-day period to attend his niece’s ceremony.
It has claimed that the female father died last month and his grandfather also expired.
The court has called on a status report along with verification reports regarding the engagement ceremony and the verification report of the death of the people concerned from an investigative official (IO).
IO submitted a report verifying the claim made by the defendant.
During a fight, the prosecution filed that it did not mind if permission was given to attend the ceremony for a limited period of time only a day.
“Therefore, without ignoring the benefits of the case, about humanitarian reasons.
Punishment of punishment of Narapidah Dinesh Chandra Sharma was suspended for two days, namely, 21 and 22 November and he was allowed to attend the engagement ceremony,” the court said.
This case was related to damaging evidence in the case of the main fire tragedy in which Ansal-Ansal was punished and sentenced to a two-year prison by the Supreme Court.
However, the APEX court released them by considering their prison time.
It has been done in the condition that they pay each RS 30 Crore, to be used to build a trauma center in the national capital.
The Masters Court on November 8 provides seven-year prison requirements to Ansals and Sharma along with Individual PP Batra and Anoop Singh for towing and other violations.
The Head of Metropolitan Magistrate Pankaj Sharma also imposed a fine of Rs 2.25 Crore on Ansals and RS three lakh each at the other three.
Ansals and Sharma have challenged confidence and they challenged the term before the session court and also urged the court to suspend their punishment while fat appeal.
Damaging was detected for the first time on July 20, 2002, and when it was excavated, the department’s investigation began against Sharma and he was suspended.
Then an investigation was carried out and he was stopped from the service on June 25, 2004.
The prosecution said that after termination, Ansal brothers helped Sharma get a job with a monthly salary of Rs 15,000.
When the case is registered, company documents, where Sharma employs post suspensions, increasingly damaged by the chairman Anoop Singh.
According to the filling sheet, the documents allegedly were damaged by police memos which provided details of the recovery immediately after the incident, Delhi fire service records related to transformer repairs installed in Uphaar, and four checks.
Of the six sets of documents, check RS 50 Lakh, issued by Ansal Sushil for themselves, and a few minutes from the MD meeting, it was proven without a doubt that the two brothers handled everyday theater affairs in the relevant time, said the charging sheet.
The fire broke out in the Uphaar cinema during the Hindi ‘border’ film screening on June 13, 1997, claiming 59 lives.
The case was submitted towards the Delhi High Court while hearing the petition by Afut Chairson Neelam Krishnameorthy.