Twist in Air India peeing incident, accused claims woman peed herself

Senior advocate Ramesh Gupta, appearing for Mishra, accused police and the press of turning the case into a joke.

New Delhi: In a surprise U-turn, Shankar Mishra, the man accused of urinating on an elderly woman co-passenger on an Air India flight, told a Delhi court on Friday he did not commit the offensive act.

The claim by his lawyer, made for the first time since the sordid event unfolded on an Air India New York-New Delhi flight on November 26 last year, flies in the face of denunciation of the accused by some of the co-passengers and even a string of WhatsApp exchanges he had with the victim woman which suggested the unsavoury incident indeed took place.

The counsel for the accused made the submission before Additional Sessions Judge Harjyot Singh Bhalla while arguing against a Delhi police petition seeking revision of an order passed by a magisterial court denying police his custodial interrogation.

The judge disposed of the application, saying the submissions made before him did not seem to have been made in front of the Metropolitan Magistrate. He said police can approach the magisterial court with its application afresh.

“I’m not the accused. There must be someone else. It seems she herself urinated. She was suffering from some disease related to prostate which several ‘kathak dancers’ seem to suffer from. It was not him. The seating system was such that no one could go to her seat.

“Her seat could only be approached from behind, and in any case the urine could not reach to seat’s front area. Also, the passanger sitting behind the complainant did not make any such complaint,” the defence advocate told the judge.

Senior advocate Ramesh Gupta, appearing for Mishra, accused police and the press of turning the case into a joke.

“The first complaint was made by complainant a day after the incident. What was the claim? To refund. That was done by the airline. The police and press have turned this case into a joke… Was this case so big, was it a murder case that they reached Bangalore to arrest me and called me an absconder. He was removed from job,” the defence counsel said.

Arguing for fresh custody of the accused, the prosecutor told the court that Mishra’s interrogation was required to establish the sequence of events.

“His family members tried to contact….accused tried to evade. We also need to find out whether he had consumed anything else before boarding the plane, and how did he consume. Questions like where did he hide himself, why was he not appearing before the (probe) agency, need to be answered. He had switched off his phone,” the prosecution told the court.

It added after the accused used his phone for around 15 seconds, he was arrested from a guest house, where he had not even entered his name.

“We need sustained interrogation to find out who was hiding him. We are not going to use third degree,” police told the court.

The judge, however, said whatever submission he was making was not dealt with by the metropolitan magistrate.

“You can go back to MM with these grounds. It seems the grounds urged before me were not submitted before the MM. In case these grounds were not made before MM, no fault can be found with MM for not dealing with those grounds,” the judge said.

Even otherwise, if additional facts are raised, the application can be moved before the magistrate, the court said.

“With these the application is disposed of. Department can approach MM afresh with these grounds if it wishes so,” the judge said.

Earlier during the arguments, the judge asked police if the complainant had given any statement that there was prior altercation or enmity with the accused. The prosecution replied in the negative.

“Then the case relates only from him leaving (his seat) to returning. You can question him in jail as well,” the judge said.
Mishra was accused of having exposed himself before the victim woman in a drunken state and urinated on her. Delhi police registered an FIR against him on January 4 on the complaint of the woman.

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