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Two Indian men cleared of raping and killing British schoolgirl Scarlett Keeling on Goa beach | Two Indian men cleared of raping and killing British schoolgirl Scarlett Keeling on Goa beach |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Two men have been cleared of raping a British schoolgirl and leaving her to die on a beach in Goa. | Two men have been cleared of raping a British schoolgirl and leaving her to die on a beach in Goa. |
Scarlett Keeling, 15, had been on holiday with her family in the popular Indian resort town of Anjuna when she attended a Valentine’s Day party in 2008. | |
Her partially undressed body was found on the beach the following day, showing bruises and signs of an attack. | Her partially undressed body was found on the beach the following day, showing bruises and signs of an attack. |
Two local men, Samson D’Souza and Placido Carvalho, were accused of raping and assaulting Scarlett before leaving her unconscious to drown. | |
On Friday, judge Vandana Tendulkar cleared them of charges of rape and culpable homicide in a brief court hearing, which reportedly lasted less than a minute. | On Friday, judge Vandana Tendulkar cleared them of charges of rape and culpable homicide in a brief court hearing, which reportedly lasted less than a minute. |
The two defendants were also acquitted of causing injury or death through supplying drugs and destroying evidence. | The two defendants were also acquitted of causing injury or death through supplying drugs and destroying evidence. |
It came after a series of delays in the eight-year long case, which saw a change in prosecutor. | It came after a series of delays in the eight-year long case, which saw a change in prosecutor. |
Fiona MacKeown, Scarlett’s mother, is planning to launch an appeal following the acquittal. | Fiona MacKeown, Scarlett’s mother, is planning to launch an appeal following the acquittal. |
“I am disappointed with the verdict and I will definitely move to the higher court,” she said. | |
Speaking to Sky News before the ruling, she described her daughter’s death as every “parent’s worst nightmare”. | Speaking to Sky News before the ruling, she described her daughter’s death as every “parent’s worst nightmare”. |
“It’s bad enough to lose a child to murder without it being dragged out so long,” she added. | |
“They hoped I’d get tired and get fed up of waiting or wouldn’t come back. They were wrong.” | |
Prosecutors alleged Carvalho and D’Souza had plied Scarlett with drugs, raped her and left her unconscious on the beach where she subsequently drowned. | |
A post-mortem examination showed there was ecstasy, cocaine and LSD in the teenager’s body but the defendants claimed she had taken the substances willingly. | |
Their friends and relatives cheered as they were acquitted in court, with D’Souza telling reporters he was happy with the verdict, adding: “Justice has prevailed”. | |
His defence lawyer, Marvin D’Souza, said the investigation had been influenced by diplomatic pressure and trial by media. | |
An initial police investigation found Scarlett had drowned accidentally but a second post-mortem sparked a new probe after finding she was drugged and raped. | |
Scarlett, from Bideford in north Devon, suffered 50 separate injuries in the attack. | Scarlett, from Bideford in north Devon, suffered 50 separate injuries in the attack. |
The court case started in 2010 but progressed slowly, hampered by a public prosecutor withdrawing from proceedings and a key witness refusing to testify for the prosecution. | The court case started in 2010 but progressed slowly, hampered by a public prosecutor withdrawing from proceedings and a key witness refusing to testify for the prosecution. |
Scarlett’s family were on a six-month trip to India at the time of her death. Her mother, her partner and siblings were visiting Karnataka at the time but Scarlett returned early to attend the party. | |
Additional reporting by PA | Additional reporting by PA |