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Home > Mumbai > Mumbai News > Article > Mumbai Will not beg for mercy says Chintan Upadhyay

Mumbai: Will not beg for mercy, says Chintan Upadhyay

Updated on: 08 October,2023 07:38 AM IST  |  Mumbai
Samiullah Khan , Gautam S Mengle | samiullah.khan@mid-day.com gautam.mengle@mid-day.com

Artist, convicted in wife’s murder case, tells judge he has committed no crime, even as arguments over his sentence begin

Mumbai: Will not beg for mercy, says Chintan Upadhyay

Artist Chintan Upadhyay, convicted in connection with his wife Hema and her lawyer Haresh Bhambhani’s murder, being escorted into court, even as friends and relatives rally around him. Pic/Sayyed Sameer Abedi

Two days after he was convicted in connection with the murder of his wife and her lawyer, artist Chintan Upadhyay on Saturday told the trial court that he had done nothing wrong and was not going to “beg for mercy”.


Upadhyay and his fellow convicts Vijay Rajbhar, Pradeep Rajbhar and Shivkumar Rajbhar were produced before Additional Sessions Judge SY Bhosale in the Dindoshi Sessions Court on Saturday, where arguments on their quantum of sentence commenced. Upadhyay was visibly stoic as he was led from the police van into the court premises, even as his friends and family members rallied around him amidst tight police cover.


The judge read out the charges against each of the convicts and told them about the punishment their charges attracted, after which each of them were asked if they had anything to say. Upadhyay, who was called last, waited till the charges were read out. When the question was asked again, he responded in an even tone, “My position is already clear. I have done nothing wrong, I have committed no crime. But the court has found me guilty and I am not going to beg for any mercy. Whatever punishment the court feels appropriate, I will accept it. I still have faith in the law and judicial system.”


The other three convicts, meanwhile, were noticeably disturbed even as they entered the court premises. Vijay, when speaking to the judge, broke down and, between sobs, managed to convey that his three children were unable to get admission to any school due to his imprisonment. Pradeep, too, spoke about his family and their hardship. Shivkumar, meanwhile, said, “I was 18 years old when I went to jail and I have spent eight years behind the bars. My only plea is that the time I have already served be counted in my sentence.”

During arguments, Special Public Prosecutor Vaibhav Bagade sought death penalty, saying that the matter was fit to be counted in the rarest of rare cases. “The photographs of the crime scene, which have been submitted as evidence, are enough to indicate that this was a voluntarily committed heinous crime against two people, with no compelling circumstances or unnecessary provocation. The relationship between the murderer and the victim can also not be overlooked,” he said.

The lawyers representing Vijay, Pradeep and Shivkumar sought minimum punishment for them, arguing that they had no past criminal records and were the sole earning members of their families. Meanwhile, advocate Raja Thakare, representing Upadhyay, said that the approach towards cases should be more liberal, and that life imprisonment in such cases is the rule, and not death sentences. He further argued that the requirement here is reformation.

Referring to Upadhyay’s own remarks to the judge, Thakare said, “The manner of my client should not be considered arrogant. Not showing repentance is not arrogance. He means that he cannot plead his case further, and hence, is not seeking any mercy.” The court’s decision is expected on Monday.

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