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Nithari killings: Moninder Singh Pandher, Surinder Koli get death penalty in Pinki Sarkar murder case
A CBI court on Monday convicted businessman Moninder Singh Pandher and his domestic help Surender Koli to death in a Nithari serial rape and murder case.
Ghaziabad: A special CBI court here on Monday awarded death sentence to businessman Moninder Singh Pandher and his domestic help Surinder Koli in one of the cases of the sensational Nithari killings.
Pandher and Koli were sentenced to death in Pinki Sarkar murder case.
Special Judge Pawan Kumar Tiwari observed it is a rarest of rare case which had shaken the society.
Pandher and his domestic help Koli were held guilty of kidnapping, rape, and murder in the case.
The judge also slapped a fine of Rs 10,000 on Koli under Section 302, a further 10 years for abduction with intention to murder and Rs 10,000 fine, 10 years jail under Sections 376 (rape)and 511 (attempt to commit offences punishable with imprisonment for life) and a Rs 10,000 fine and seven year jail term and Rs 5,000 fine under Section 201 (causing disappearance of evidence of offence). All the terms of imprisonment would be increased for failure to pay the fines.
Police had discovered 19 skeletons from Pandher's house in Nithari in Noida on December 29, 2006.
Pandher and Koli were charge-sheeted in 16 of the 19 cases, while three were closed for want of evidence.
Most of the victims were young girls.
Pandher was slapped a Rs 10,000 fine under Section 302, a seven year jail term along with Rs 10,000 fine under Sections 376 and 511 and seven years jail and Rs 5,000 fine under Section 201. All jail terms would be increased for failing to pay the fines.
The case, the eighth of the several lodged against them, was registered by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on December 29, 2006.
Koli and Pandher were present in the court during the sentencing. Pandher was earlier out on bail but was taken into police custody on Saturday after being held guilty.
Prosecution lawyer JP Sharma sought the death sentence and argued that forensic evidence proved that Koli abducted, killed and raped the woman and also tampered with evidence.
Since Pandher was in collusion with his domestic help, so he deserved the same punishment for the crime rarest of rare, he said.
Also seeking the death penalty for both the convicts, lawyer Khalid Khan, appearing for the victim's family, alleged that police had been lax from the beginning and therefore the woman's family had engaged him in the case.
On October 5, 2006, the woman was returning home from work. She took the road outside Pandher's residence.
Koli lured her inside where she was killed and beheaded. Investigators found her skull behind the house, and its DNA matched with her parents.
Her parents also identified her clothes, which were recovered from Koli.
Defence lawyer Devraj Singh pleaded for minimum punishment as Pandher suffers from high blood pressure and diabetes.
He also said it has been proved that on that date of the crime, he was in Dehradun. Claiming that Pandher had been denied justice, since in an earlier case, he was acquitted by the Allahabad High Court. He also noted that the Supreme Court had found Koli guilty of crime, not Pandher.
The gruesome cases came to light in 2006 when the police discovered the skulls and bones of 16 persons, mostly children, near Pandher's house in Noida's Nithari village.
Earlier, many children had gone missing from the nearby slums of Nithari and their parents alleged that police had ignored their complaints.
It was alleged that Koli would lure the children to the house, offering them sweets and chocolates, murder them and have sex with the corpses. He was also accused of cannibalism. He would throw the bones and other belongings into a ditch behind the house.