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Report on TP Chandrasekharan murder case states that KC Ramachandran “has no guilt feeling.”

According to a report presented to the High Court by the Kozhikode probation office’s extra district probation officer, KC Ramachandran, a prominent conspirator in the murder of TP Chandrasekharan, “has no guilt feeling” after spending several years behind bars. He’s currently free on parole.

According to the article, Ramachandran believes he is innocent since he was at home when the crime occurred.

In addition, the report, which includes the victim’s family’s responses, states that MLA K K Rema—the deceased RMP leader’s wife—revealed that she and her son still get threatening messages and worry for their lives.

In a plea deal submitted by Rema and the state government to increase the sentence imposed, the HC will take into account the report as well as the accused’s mitigating circumstances.

Ramachandran, a member of the CPM local committee in Kunnumkara, was reportedly troubled by the HC’s decision, according to the article. He spent several years working as the principal prison librarian in Kannur.

Ramachandran claimed that he was the victim of political retaliation during the hearing on the petition to increase the sentence.

During his parole days, he participated in the local Sparsham Palliative Society events and was a member of the Vadakara block panchayat. With community members’ assistance, Ramachandran said he also intends to launch a “pakal veedu” for older folks’ health and wellbeing.

He was the subject of no complaints from the jail administration, and nothing went wrong during his sporadic release, which began in 2016.

According to the article, Ramachandran has never been convicted before. It was evident that even after several years in incarceration, his behavior had not changed much.

According to Kodi Suni’s social investigation report, he was employed as a headload laborer in Chokli at the time of the murder. He was reportedly a supporter of the CPM but not an active participant. In the past, he was mentioned in a great deal of other Mahe criminal cases.

A report on the assessment of prisoners by medical professionals from Kannur MCH’s psychiatric department was also provided by the jail administration. The early assessments do not indicate the existence of any serious active psychopathology at this time, according to those reports’ conclusions.

To determine if mental disease is present or absent, a thorough assessment with a trustworthy informant for at least 10 to 14 days of observation is advised.

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