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Sisters on death row, convicted for killing 5
tots, have hardly any chance of escaping the noose
By Nikita Doval - ManoramaOnline.com
April 13, 2012
The first
woman to be hanged in India is likely to be either Renuka Shinde
or sister Seema Gavit
Shashwat Gupta Ray - Tehelka.com
September 16, 2006
SC upholds death penalty to 2 sisters in Anjanabai Gavit
case
Oneindia.in
August 31, 2006
New Delhi, Aug 31 (UNI) Delivering a speedy
ruling in the sensational Anjanabai Gavit serial murder case, the
Supreme Court today upheld the death sentence awarded to two
sisters, convicted of murdering five children out of the 13 they
had kidnapped and forced into petty crime.
A bench, comprising Justices K G Balakrishnan
and G P Mathur, dismissed appeals by sisters -- Renuka Kiran
Shinde (31) and Seema Mohan Gavit (29) against the judgement of
the Nagpur bench of the Bombay High Court in September 2004
confirming the death sentence awarded by the Kolhapur sessions
court in 2001, holding that there were no mitigating circumstances
in favour of the two appelants.
''Going into the details of the case, we find
no mitigating circumstances against them apart from the fact they
are women.
Further the nature of their crime and the
systematic way in which each child was kidnapped and killed amply
demonstrates the depravity of the mind of the appelants. They
indulged in criminal activities for a very long period and
continued till they were caught by the police. They very cleverly
executed plans of kidnapping the children, and the moment they
were no longer useful, killed them and threw the dead body at some
deserted place,'' they said.
The bench said that the sisters had ''not been
committing crimes under compulsion but took it very casually and
killed all these children, least bothering about their life or the
agony of their parents.'' ''We do not think that these appelants
are likely to reform, and will remain a menace to society. The
inhabitants of the locality in which the two were living was so
horrified that they could not send their children to school for
the fear that they would be kidnapped or killed,'' it further
noted.
The bench also vacated the stay it had granted
against the execution of both, when their appeal had been admitted
and directed the authorities concerned to make all arrangements
for the execution of the penalty.
Renuka alias Rinku, her husband Kiran Shinde
and her sister along with their mother, Anjanabai Gavit, were part
of a gang that kidnapped children from Thane, Nashik and other
areas between 1990 and 1996 and forced them to become beggars or
commit petty thefts.
Later, when the children began to pose a
problem, they were mercilessly killed by the gang members.
The gang had kidnapped over a dozen children in
this period, all of whom later disappeared. The murders of the
children, aged between seven months and four years, had gone
undetected for nearly six years. While there were no eyewitnesses
in the case, the prosecution had relied on the testimony of
Renuka's husband, who had turned approver.
Facing charges for the murder of nine children,
the two sisters and their mother Anjanabai were ultimately
convicted of the murder of five -- identified as Santosh, Anjali,
Shradha, Gauri and Pankaj.
However, Anjanabai had died in custody in 1997,
a little over an year after her arrest.
Death for child-smash sisters
TelegraphIndia.com
August 31, 2006
Two sisters who kidnapped
children and killed them by smashing their heads against walls or
electricity poles could become the first women to be hanged in
Independent India.
The Supreme Court today upheld
the death sentences awarded to Renuka Kiran Shinde, 39, and Seema
Mohan Gavit, 35, refusing leniency to the “depraved” women and
saying they were unlikely to reform themselves if given a second
chance at life.
The Pune-based sisters were
accused of kidnapping 13 children under five between 1990 and 1996
and killing nine of them, but only five of the murders could be
proved.
They would carry the children in
their arms to avoid suspicion while moving about in crowded
places, snatching purses. The children were murdered when they
grew too old to be carried about, or if they tended to cry in
public and arouse suspicion.
When one such child’s cries led
to a scuffle outside a temple in Kolhapur, the sisters threw him
down to momentarily divert the public’s attention. As they seized
their chance to escape, the women somehow managed to pick the
severely injured child up and take him along. Their mother
Anjanabai later killed him by smashing his head against a pole,
police said.
Another victim, a three-year-old
who talked to passers-by about his parents, was hung upside down
from the ceiling and his head was repeatedly slammed against a
wall. Among the other victims were two 18-month-olds and a
two-year-old.
The apex court took note of how
the women killed the children “the moment they were no longer
useful’’, acting not “under any compulsion but very casually…
least bothering about their lives or agony of their parents”.
If the court — which has
described the case as “rarest of the rare” — rejects the sisters’
review plea, their only hope would be their mercy petition that
has been lying with the President for five years.
Although many women are awarded
the death sentence in India, legal experts couldn’t recall any
being executed after Independence. Some have had their sentences
commuted — as happened with Rajiv Gandhi murder accused Nalini —
and the mercy petitions of many more are pending.
Lawyers said this was probably
the first case in India where two women had been sentenced to
death.
Seema and Renuka were allegedly
helped by Anjanabai and Renuka’s husband Kiran Shinde in
kidnapping the children from railway stations, bus stands and
temples in Kolhapur, Thane, Mumbai and Nashik.
Anjanabai died a year after the
gang’s arrest in 1996 while Kiran had all charges dropped against
him after he turned approver and testified against his wife and
sister-in-law.
After a three-year trial, a
sessions court awarded the death sentences to the sisters in 2001
and Bombay High Court upheld them in 2004.
“The nature of the crime and the
systematic way in which each child was kidnapped and killed amply
demonstrates the depravity of the mind of the appellants (the
convicts),’’ the Supreme Court bench headed by Justice K.G.
Balakrishnan said today.
“We have carefully considered the
whole aspect of the case and are also alive to the new trends in
sentencing system in criminology. We do not think that these
appellants are likely to be reformed."
Killer sisters nurtured by mother
TelegraphIndia.com
August 31, 2006
It started as personal vendetta
and soon turned into a profession.
Renuka Shinde and Seema Gavit
abducted their first victim in 1990, police said. It was the elder
daughter of their father’s second wife.
The sisters, whose death sentence
was upheld by the Supreme Court today, went on a kidnapping spree
after that. All their victims were little children, some of whom
were killed, and the hand that rocked the crime cradle was their
58-year-old mother’s.
Anjanabai Gavit, a resident of
Kothrud in Pune, was never an average housewife. There are 125
cases lodged against her for petty thefts like picking pockets and
snatching gold chains at crowded railway stations.
But the small-time criminal
turned cold-blooded kidnapper when her husband Mohan left her to
marry another woman named Pratima in 1990. Along with daughters
Renuka and Seema and Renuka’s husband Kiran Shinde, Anjanabai,
then aged 58, plotted to abduct Mohan and Pratima’s first
daughter.
The second daughter was to be
kidnapped in 1996, but police caught up with her and her family.
The six years in between saw
Anjanabai mastermind the kidnappings of a dozen children in
Nashik, Pune and Kolhapur.
Investigations revealed that the
family would take the abducted children along to distract
attention while they carried out petty crimes — and to win the
police’s sympathy if caught. But when the kids outgrew their
utility or stood in the family’s way, they were done away with.
Kiran, who turned approver in the
case, gave the police an account of the torture inflicted on the
children.
Santosh, barely 18 months old,
began crying one evening at a bus stand. Fearing he would draw
people’s attention, the women banged his head against the floor
and then an iron pole till he died. His body was thrown under an
autorickshaw. Another 18-month-old, Bhavna, was gagged, bundled
into a handbag and dumped in the ladies’ toilet of a cinema.
Two-year-old Naresh was starved
and beaten to death because he would wail for his mother.
Three-year-old Pankaj made an even bigger mistake. He would talk
to passers-by about his parents. So he was hung upside down from
the ceiling and his head slammed against a wall.
The drive for personal revenge
came back to haunt the family in 1996, when the sisters set out to
claim their 14th victim — their second step-sister. But this time,
they landed in the police net.
The Gavits and the Shindes were
lodged in Yerwada prison, where Anjanabai died a year later.
The trial began in September
1998, and three years later, Kolhapur additional district and
sessions judge G.L. Yedke awarded the death penalty to Renuka and
Seema in a crowded courtroom.
Charges were dropped against
Renuka’s husband Kiran, who had testified against the women.
The couple have four children of
their own. They were handed over to Kiran’s Pune-based mother.
HC upholds death rap for killer sisters
IndiaTimes.com
September 9, 2004
MUMBAI: Justices R M S Khandeparkar and R S
Mohite of the Bombay high court on Wednesday upheld the death
sentence awarded to sisters Renuka Shinde and Seema Gavit, who had
kidnapped 13 children and murdered five of them between June 1990
and October 1996.
The sisters had been sentenced to death by the
Kolhapur sessions court. They were convicted for the murder of
five of them.
The sisters, along with their late mother
Anjana Gavit and Renuka's husband Kiran Shinde, would kidnap the
children and force them into begging and petty thefts.
However, when the children became a liability,
the women simply killed them.
Sisters get death penalty for killing 9 children
IndiaTimes.com
June 29, 2001
Kolhapur: In the sensational Anjanabai Gavit case, a local court
on Thursday sentenced to death two sisters who killed six
children.
Renuka Kiran Shinde (27) and her sister, Seema
Mohan Gavit
(25), who had been convicted on June 22 for kidnapping 13 children
and killing nine of them, were sentenced to death by hanging. The
court acquitted Kiran Shinde, Renuka's husband, who had turned
approver.
Anjanabai Gavit, the principal accused and mother of the
sisters, had died as an undertrial in December 1997, 14 months
after she was arrested in Nasik.
Renuka and Seema did not show any emotion after
the verdict was pronounced.
Renuka has four children, while Seema is
unmarried.
Over 3,000 people had gathered in the court
premises to hear the verdict in the murder case, which had rocked
the state a decade ago.
Before pronouncing the verdict, judge G L Yedke
said that the women had kidnapped innocent children who could not
offer any resistance, had used them for the purpose of begging,
and then killed them brutally when the children outlived their
utility. These matters were taken into consideration while
awarding the sentences, he said.
Describing the murders as most heinous, judge
Yedge said that the two sisters seemed to have enjoyed killing the
children. The judge said that special government prosecutor Ujwal
Nikam, who had termed the child murders as a blot on humanity, had
sought death for the convicts, and he had conceded the demand. The
death sentence is subject to confirmation by the Bombay high
court.
After the verdict, approver Kiran Shinde, who
was acquitted, touched Nikam's feet in gratitude.
Incidentally, this is the 10th court case in which Nikam has
succeeded in securing death sentences for murderers.
Anjanabai and her two daughters kidnapped 13
children from different parts of the state in the early 1990s and
killed nine of them. There was insufficient evidence to link the
women to three of the deaths. The victims were aged between one
and five years.
Although there was not a single eye-witness to
the crimes, the court relied on the deposition of the approver
Kiran Shinde. During the hearing, the court examined 156 witnesses
and all deposed against the accused.
Panch witness identifies accused Seema Gavit
IndianExpress.com
December 4, 1998
KOLHAPUR, DEC 3: Ram Murlidhar Mudhe, a panch witness in the
Anjanabai Gavit abduction and murder case, today identified Seema
Gavit, one of the accused whose handwriting sample had been taken
by the CID at Nashik in Mudhe's presence in connection with the
same case.
Deposing before the Additional Sessions Judge G
L Yedke, Mudhe said he knew the lady from the time she was brought
to Nashik police custody and identified herself as Seema Mohan
Gavit. He said that her handwriting samples were taken in six
different blank papers and signed by the panchs along with him and
the CID officer Shinde.
Denying charges made by the defence lawyer
Manik Mulik, Mudhe who is a tailor from Nashik, reiterated that
Seema's handwriting samples were taken in presence of two
witnesses including him and the panchnama prepared. He swore that
the panchnama was correct and was signed by him on the direction
of police.
Mudhe elaborated that when he was reached the
CID office the woman in question wasn't there but was brought
inafter five minutes and identified herself as Seema Mohan Gavit.
Panch witness Mudhe said that Nashik CID police
had seized the visitors' register book of Parimal Lodge, Nashik,
in his presence on November 6 1996, where the accused had stayed
during the period when they had kidnapped Anjali alias Pinki.
He said that seized register panchnama was also
signed by him. He agreed that there was some overwriting and also
some figures were changed; these, he said were by the police in
his presence.
Parimal lodge owner Ajit Pahade had demanded
the copy of panchnama for his record and accordingly photocopies
of the same were handed over to the lodge owner. However, later
the police discovered some mistake in the original copy of the
panchnama and while inspecting they found that the copy was
overwritten, he clarified.
Meanwhile, defence lawyer Manik Mulik raised a
strong objection over the public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam's
application to grant permission to Kiran Shinde, an approver in
case, to met hischildren.
Earlier, advocate Nikam had, through an
application before additional sessions judge G L Yedke, requested
the court to allow Shinde to meet his four children, who are
presently placed in a remand home here. Defence lawyer Mulik
pointed out that since approver Shinde was also one of the main
accused in the case it could affect the trial.