Hartosh Singh Bal - Death of Judge Loya: A critical examination of the ECG
and the post-mortem demonstrates the failings of the Supreme Court verdict
<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/rDjrdY/~3/u0pbB3WEA5A/hartosh-singh-bal-death-of-judge-loya.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email>

Posted: 24 Apr 2018 08:26 AM PDT
*NB*: This article, along with Shanti Bhushan's petition listing ten
instances of bench fixing
<https://dilipsimeon.blogspot.in/2018/04/master-of-roster-shanti-bhushans.html>,
shows who is committing contempt of court. You cannot utilise your formal
authority to throw all principles of fairness (such as not sitting in
judgement in a case involving yourself) - to the winds; and then behave as
if your status precludes any fair criticism. It is for the Hon'ble judges
to answer to their respective consciences as to who has undermined the
authority of India's judiciary - the so-called Master of the Roster or
those who are criticising his questionable behaviour. *DS*

*Hartosh Singh Bal - Death of Judge Loya*
<http://www.caravanmagazine.in/vantage/death-of-judge-loya-supreme-court-examination-ecg-post-mortem-demonstrates-failings-judgment>
*The judgment repeatedly asserts there is no reason to doubt the testimony
of the judges. But an inquiry would not have cast any doubt on their
accounts - rather, it would have allowed the judges to dispel the lack of
clarity on crucial points such as the ECG.*

The Supreme Court judgment on petitions demanding an inquiry into the judge
BH Loya’s death begins by stating that the “petitioners seek an inquiry
into the circumstances of the death” of the judge. It concludes: “The
documentary material on the record indicates that the death of Judge Loya
was due to natural causes.” Over its span, the judgment ends up doing
exactly as the petitioners sought—inquiring into the circumstances
surrounding Loya’s death—but without enabling the scope of investigation
that an independent inquiry would have allowed.

*Sabotage of Indian criminal justice continues: Aseemanand’s ‘disclosure’
missing from court
<https://dilipsimeon.blogspot.in/2018/03/sabotage-of-indian-criminal-justice.html>*
*Caesar’s wife must be above suspicion // Death of Judge Loya: Uncle
Shrinivas wants a probe*
<https://dilipsimeon.blogspot.in/2018/01/medical-council-of-india-bribery-scam.html>
*An ex-CM commits suicide in 2016, alleging corruption in the high
judiciary - no probe. A senior judge dies a mysterious death. India's
pliant media covers it up. What Does the SC Judges’ protest mean for this
situation?*
<https://dilipsimeon.blogspot.in/2018/01/an-ex-cm-commits-suicide-in-2016.html>

Two medical documents were essential to determining whether the
circumstances surrounding Loya’s death were suspicious—an ECG purportedly
conducted on Loya at Dande Hospital shortly before his death, and the
post-mortem report prepared at the Government Medical College in Nagpur.
Though there are a range of issues in the judgment that need to be
examined, even a scrutiny limited to the manner in which it deals with
these documents is enough to indicate that an inquiry broader in scope than
the court allowed itself would have resulted in a different conclusion.

The judgment relies heavily on the testimonies that four judges who said
they were with Loya on the night he died—Shrikant Kulkarni and SM Modak,
who said they travelled to Nagpur from Mumbai with Loya, and VC Barde and
Roopesh Rathi, who were serving in Nagpur at the time—submitted to
Maharashtra’s State Intelligence Department, or SID, as part of its
“discreet inquiry” into Loya’s death. The state then presented these before
the court. But it is important to note that the judges’ testimonies only
form an account of the hours preceding and immediately after Loya’s
death—they can only confirm whether an ECG test was conducted or a
post-mortem was ordered. Whether an ECG or a post-mortem indicated that
Loya suffered a heart attack, and whether these medical documents were in
any way manipulated, cannot lie within the judges’ knowledge.

Details brought to light by *The Caravan*—most of which the court did not
consider, and some that it set aside on grounds that do not stand
scrutiny—cast strong doubts on the veracity of the ECG record and the
post-mortem report. Moreover, when considered in conjunction with the fact
that leading forensic experts differ over the conclusions stated in the
post-mortem report and that *The Caravan* uncovered reasonable grounds to
suspect that the report omitted vital information, there is little left to
justify the court’s certainty that Loya died of natural causes. This
reading does not even call into question the reliability of the judges’
testimonies or cast doubt on their integrity, but is, in fact, based on
taking their accounts at face value.

*The ECG: *The court’s observations and conclusions on the ECG state that:

*a considerable degree of emphasis has been placed on the statement of
Judge Rathi that the nodes of the ECG machine at Dande hospital were not
working. Based on this, it has been seriously urged that in fact no ECG was
done at Dande hospital. Judge Shrikant Kulkarni in his statement dated 24
November 2017 has stated that “emergency treatment” was given to Judge Loya
at Dande hospital. Judge SM Modak states that after an initial check-up,
the doctors at Dande hospital advised shifting the patient to another
hospital. Judge Vijay Barde who was present at Dande hospital specifically
stated that the medical officer on duty there examined (“checked-up”) Judge
Loya “by ECG, blood pressure etc. as per their procedure”. Judge Rathi has
stated that at Dande hospital, time was wasted because the nodes of the ECG
machine were broken and the machine was not working. This statement of
Judge Rathi must, however, be weighed with the doctor’s progress notes at
Meditrina hospital. The death summary… specifically adverts to the fact
that the patient was taken to Dande hospital earlier where an ECG was done.
Dr Dande has made the same statement. The progress notes also note a “tall
‘T’” in the anterior lead which indicates that the ECG was seen by the
doctors attending to Judge Loya at Meditrina hospital. These progress notes
are contemporaneous, since they also form part of the communication
addressed by Dr NB Gawande at Meditrina to the PSI at Sitabardi on the same
day after the judge had been brought dead to the hospital. As a matter of
fact, it is this very ECG which forms the subject matter of the submissions
which have been urged by one of the intervenors, for whom Mr Prashant
Bhushan appears. Having regard to the fact that the ECG has been
specifically mentioned in the progress notes of the doctor at Meditrina
hospital, we find no reasonable basis to infer that no ECG was done at
Dande hospital.*

Only two of the four judges mentioned the ECG in their statements. The
first, Barde, stated that the medical officer at Dande Hospital “checked
up” Loya “by ECG, Blood Pressure etc. as per their procedure.” Though the
court interprets it as such, this statement is not a categorical assertion
that an ECG was done. A categorical statement in this regard is actually
made by Rathi, who, as the court notes, told the SID that “at Dande
hospital, time was wasted because the nodes of the ECG machine were broken
and the machine was not working.” This is not a passing reference—Rathi
clearly states that the nodes of the ECG machine were broken and indicates
that though the doctor attempted to conduct the test, the machine did not
work.

The judgment repeatedly asserts there is no reason to doubt the testimony
of the judges. But an inquiry would not have cast any doubt on their
accounts—rather, it would have allowed the judges to dispel the lack of
clarity on crucial points such as the ECG. Instead of ordering such an
inquiry, the court chose to disregard Rathi’s clear and specific eyewitness
testimony on circumstantial grounds.

The judgment states that his account “must be weighed” with the doctor’s
progress notes said to have been prepared at Meditrina hospital. The court
notes that this document “specifically adverts to the fact that the patient
was taken to Dande hospital earlier where an ECG was done.” It further
notes that the progress notes refer to “a ‘tall ‘T’ in the anterior lead”
in the ECG said to have been conducted at Dande Hospital, indicating that
the doctors attending to Loya at Meditrina saw the record. The court adds:
“These progress notes are contemporaneous, since they also form part of the
communication addressed by Dr NB Gawande at Meditrina to the PSI at
Sitabardi on the same day … Having regard to the fact that the ECG has been
specifically mentioned in the progress notes of the doctor at Meditrina
hospital, we find no reasonable basis to infer that no ECG was done at
Dande hospital.”

An inquiry that would not have been restricted to the material before the
Supreme Court—as the petitioners sought—would have established that there
is strong reason to doubt this chain of events elaborated by the Supreme
Court… *read more:*
http://www.caravanmagazine.in/vantage/death-of-judge-loya-
supreme-court-examination-ecg-post-
<http://www.caravanmagazine.in/vantage/death-of-judge-loya-supreme-court-examination-ecg-post-mortem-demonstrates-failings-judgment>
mortem-demonstrates-failings-judgment
<http://www.caravanmagazine.in/vantage/death-of-judge-loya-supreme-court-examination-ecg-post-mortem-demonstrates-failings-judgment>

*see also*
Death of Judge Loya: Government documents placed before Supreme Court raise
more questions, deepen the mystery. By ATUL DEV
<https://dilipsimeon.blogspot.in/2018/01/death-of-judge-loya-government.html>

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