SC has not upheld death penalty in 3 years: report

  • A NALSA–NALSAR Square Circle Clinic (2025) report shows the Supreme Court has not confirmed any death sentence in the last three years, indicating rising judicial caution toward capital punishment.
  • 10 death-row acquittals by the Supreme Court in 2025, the highest in a decade, highlight serious concerns about trial accuracy and sentencing standards.
  • Data reveal a sharp disconnect between Sessions Courts and appellate courts, raising questions about fairness, evidence appreciation, and sentencing procedures in capital cases.

Relevance

  • GS2 (Polity): Judiciary, Article 21, criminal justice
  • GS2 (Governance): Due process, legal aid
  • Capital punishment in India is legally valid but restricted to the rarest of raredoctrine evolved in Bachan Singh v. State of Punjab (1980).
  • Death penalty may be awarded for crimes like terrorism, certain aggravated murders, and rape-murder of minors under IPC/BNS and special laws.
  • India retains death penalty but uses it sparingly compared to many retentionist countries, with long appellate and mercy review layers.
  • Article 21 permits deprivation of life only by just, fair, and reasonable procedure, forming the constitutional basis for strict scrutiny in death cases.
  • Machhi Singh (1983) refined “rarest of rare” by balancing crime and criminal test, requiring consideration of mitigating circumstances.
  • Manoj v. State of MP (2022) mandated psychological evaluation and mitigation investigation before awarding death penalty.
  • Vasanta Sampat Dupare (2015) elevated fair sentencing hearing to a due process requirement.
  • 1,310 death sentences imposed by Sessions Courts between 2016–2025, indicating continued trial-level reliance on capital punishment.
  • Of 842 High Court decisions, only 70 confirmed (8.31%), while 411 commuted and 285 resulted in acquittals, showing high appellate correction rates.
  • Supreme Court decided 37 confirmed-HC cases: 15 acquittals, 14 commutations, zero confirmations in last three years.
  • 574 prisoners on death row (2025)550 men, 24 women—with average 5+ years on death row, some nearing a decade.
  • High reversal rates indicate systemic weaknesses in investigation, evidence appreciation, and legal aid quality at trial stage.
  • Nearly 95% of 2025 death sentences violated SC sentencing guidelines, lacking mitigation studies or psychological reports.
  • Sentencing hearings often held within days of conviction, undermining individualised sentencing and defence preparedness.
  • Prolonged death row incarceration creates death row phenomenon—mental trauma recognised in jurisprudence as rights concern.
  • Disproportionate impact on economically weaker and legally underrepresented accused, raising equality and fairness concerns.
  • Ethical debate persists between retributive justice vs reformative justice approaches.
  • 140+ countries globally are abolitionist in law or practice (Amnesty data), indicating global shift away from capital punishment.
  • International human rights bodies increasingly view death penalty as incompatible with evolving standards of dignity and human rights.
  • India remains a retentionist but low-execution country, with very few actual executions in recent decades.
  • Arbitrary application despite “rarest of rare” doctrine leads to sentencing inconsistency explaining high appellate reversals.
  • Weak mitigation investigation and poor legal aid reduce fair trial guarantees.
  • Delays in appeals and mercy petitions prolong uncertainty and psychological suffering.
  • Lack of empirical evidence that death penalty has greater deterrent effect than life imprisonment.
  • Institutionalise mitigation investigation units and trained sentencing specialists for capital cases.
  • Ensure mandatory compliance with Manoj guidelines before confirming death sentences.
  • Strengthen legal aid and forensic standards at trial level.
  • Consider Law Commission’s earlier recommendations favouring progressive abolition except for terrorism-related offences.
  • Move toward life imprisonment without remission as proportionate alternative in heinous crimes.

February 2026
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