Salman Khan's bodyguard [ it should be officer posted to accompany him !] , the late police constable Ravindra Patil, played a crucial role in the actor's conviction in the 2002 hit-and-run case. It was Patil who called police after the accident, and became the complainant against the actor. Patil told the court that Khan was drunk at the time of the accident. He said he had asked the actor to drive slowly , but the actor didn't pay heed to his request,“ said the main investigating officer in the case, retired assistant commissioner of police Kishan Shengal. One bakery worker was killed. Police arrested the actor around eight hours later. A young boy from Satara, Patil joined the Mumbai Police as a constable and was trained as a commando to join the Special Operations Squad (SOS) which has a primary duty of guarding VIPs. In, 2002, Patil was assigned duty as Salman’s bodyguard. But Patil's last days were spent in the shadow of disease and despair. The last time when someone really considered Ravindra Patil as a “Human Being” was when he was fighting for life in a Municipal hospital, suffering from a strain of tuberculosis that was drug resistant. He was possibly coughing out his last breath on the cold hospital floor, alone. In early 2002, Salman had filed a police report complaining about threatening calls from the underworld. The police concluded that there was a threat to the actor’s life. So they appointed the then 24-year-old constable Ravindra Patil as Salman’s unarmed bodyguard, to shadow him everywhere. On that fateful night, Patil was still guarding him. Patil, the only eye witness, decided Salman’s fate. Fast forward to 2007, when he was found on the streets of Mumbai, suffering from TB for over 2 years. His family, the police, the media, and even India’s most benevolent and kind actor - Salman Khan of Being Human fame - everyone had forgotten about him. Unsurprisingly, the film and glamour industry came out in full support of the star, from tweeting out in his defense to rushing to his Bandra residence. On the fateful night, Patil was traveling in the SUV with Salman behind wheels. Immediately after the accident, Salman vanished from the spot, while Patil rushed to the Bandra police station – to fulfill his duties as a citizen as well as a policeman – for the first information report (FIR). As years passed, being a ‘prime witness’ in a high-profile case, Patil was removed from his duties as an SOS commando. People close to him maintained that Patil was under increasing pressure to retract his statement given to the police. Even though it was never revealed who was pressurising him, it was clear that tremendous pressure was being put on Patil – he was physically and mentally crumbling. During the trial, it was clear to everyone, the only solid evidence that the police had, was Patil’s eye-witness account. There were a total of 27 witnesses in the case, but Patil was the prime witness who could turn the case around. However, when it was Patil’s turn to give his testimony in the court, he disappeared. Those close to him said that since he was isolated he did not have the courage to stand in the court. Many felt, that, it was the Mumbai Police which should have stood by him, ensured that being a prime witness and a policeman he should be protected. But, none of that happened and Patil continued to stay away from court. In fact, when he disappeared, a missing complaint was also filed by his brother. Rumours started doing rounds that Patil was being pressurised to stay away from the trial. Things took an ugly turn for Patil when the court did not appreciate the fact that he was staying away from the trial. His absence was delaying the already delayed trial. When the police were asked about Patil's whereabouts, the court was told that he had gone on leave without informing the department. Based on this information, the court issued a warrant against Patil and ordered the police to arrest him. Mumbai Police dealt a double whammy to Patil by dismissing him from service on the charges of going on leave without permission. When Patil was finally found in a hotel in Mahabaleshwar, his very own department promptly arrested him and he was sent to jail. Here again, Patil may have never imagined that he would be arrested in the very case in which he was a complainant and had himself registered an FIR. Ironically, when Patil finally deposed in the case in March 2006, he was still in jail. One can only imagine what must have gone through a policeman who is a trained commando but ended up in a dingy cell of Arthur Road jail in a case in which he is a prime witness. “It was Patil's testimony which helped in convicting Salman Khan on all charges and sentencing him to undergo five years imprisonment,” said public prosecutor Pradeep Gharat. After being released from jail, Patil again went missing. No one, including his family, knew where he was. There are reports that he had gone to his mother’s place in Dhule district. In the interim period, he was dismissed from the police department. This meant that his salary was stopped and he was left without any job. He even reportedly got divorced from his wife after being released from jail. Patil later even claimed that his family had abandoned him. In September 2007, months after he had gone missing, Patil was found in the Sewri TB hospital. Such was his physical condition that at first no one recognised him. He was reduced to a pile of bones and weighed a mere 30 kg. He was diagnosed with a deadly type of TB with little hope of survival. According to the hospital staff, Patil had reached the hospital in a pitiable condition and was unable to move or even speak. Patil had reportedly told the doctors that he was begging on the streets of Mumbai and had managed to collect Rs 50 to hire a cab to come to the hospital. He eventually lost the battle for life in Oct 2007. On Wednesday, the Sessions Court delivered justice to the victims of the accident, but, the deceased Patil still awaits justice. [ http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report-will-ravindra-patil-get-justice-2083880] Khan, who was not required to be in court for Friday’s hearing, was sentenced to five years in prison on Wednesday for culpable homicide over the 2002 incident. Today, Khan’s lawyers cited the actor’s humanitarian work through his charity Being Human and an apparent neurological condition as grounds for suspension of the sentence, the Indian Express reported. A fan of the actor reportedly tried to commit suicide by consuming poison outside the courtroom, where a large group of protesters gathered to demand that his bail be denied. Another crowd of well-wishers congregated outside his home, meanwhile, and broke into celebrations upon hearing about the suspension. And in a major relief for actor Salman Khan, his bail has been extended by the Bombay High Court today. He now has to surrender and furnish a fresh bail bond before the court. Without even blinking to follow the Salman’s case and what would happen next, the real life incident of a tough police commando Ravindra Patil, makes a very sad reading ! – and that is the sole reason for me making a post on this ...
Feeling sad – yours truly.
8th May 2015.