In India, a police volunteer was found guilty of assaulting a doctor Sexual Assault News
The woman doctor’s bloodied body was found in the classroom of a government college and hospital in Kolkata in August last year.
A police volunteer has been convicted of assaulting and murdering a trainee doctor at a hospital in India last year, which sparked nationwide protests.
The Sealdah Civil and Criminal Court convicted Sanjay Roy, 33, of the crime. force and last August’s murder of a female cadet whose body was found in a pool of blood in a classroom at the state-run RG Deaf Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata, a case that exposed the country’s struggles sexual violence against women.
Judge Anirban Das, who presided over the fast-paced trial, said the defendant, who has pleaded not guilty in court and insists he has been charged, could face life in prison or the death penalty when he is sentenced on Monday.
“Your guilt has been proven. They are prosecuting you,” the judge said, adding that the charges were proven with circumstantial evidence.
Royan’s lawyers, who have not yet commented on the verdict, claim that there are obvious inconsistencies in the opinions of the investigation and forensic examination in the process that began on November 11 and 51 witnesses were questioned.
The parents of the 31-year-old victim, who cannot be named under Indian law, expressed their displeasure with the investigation, saying the crime could not have been committed by just one person.
“Our daughter could not have met such a terrible end at the hands of a single man,” her father said. “Until all the guilty are punished, we will remain in pain and suffering. “My daughter will not be at peace until she finds justice.”

Seeking justice
On the eve of the verdict, more than 200 armed police were involved.
When Roya was brought to the court in a police car, protesters chanted “Hang him, hang him”.
Several doctors raised slogans of solidarity with the victim.
Dr Aniket Mahato, spokesperson for junior doctors, said the street protests would continue “until justice is served”.
The horrific nature of the attack sparked weeks of nationwide protests, drawing comparisons to the 2012 gang-rape and murder of a young woman on a bus in the capital, New Delhi. This led to demands for additional security from doctors in public hospitals.
India’s Supreme Court has set up a national task force to suggest ways to improve security measures at public hospitals following the protests.
The Indian federal police has also investigated the case accused the officer in charge of the local police station at the time of the crime and then the head of the hospital destroyed the crime scene, destroying the evidence.
The police officer has been released on bail, while the hospital’s former chief remains in custody in a separate case related to financial irregularities at the hospital.