Raja Raghuvanshi murder case: Meghalaya HC upholds Sonam's bail
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Meghalaya High Court on Monday, 29 June upheld a lower court's decision to grant bail to Sonam Raghuvanshi, the prime accused in the Raja Raghuvanshi honeymoon murder case, dismissing the Meghalaya government's appeal against the Shillong court's order. The ruling allows Sonam to continue on bail as trial proceedings remain underway.
What the High Court Decided
A single bench of Justice W. Diengdoh rejected the state's challenge to the April 2026 order of the Additional Deputy Commissioner (Judicial), Shillong, which had originally granted bail to Sonam citing serious procedural lapses in her arrest. The High Court had reserved its verdict on 10 June after hearing detailed arguments from both sides over several days. The detailed judgment is yet to be released.
The Procedural Lapse at the Heart of the Case
The Shillong court had granted bail on the ground that investigating officers failed to properly communicate the grounds of Sonam's arrest, thereby prejudicing her defence. Critically, all arrest-related documents — including the arrest memo, checklist for justification of arrest, inspection memo, intimation of rights, and extracts of the case diary — incorrectly cited Section 403(1) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) instead of Section 103(1), the provision dealing with murder.
The lower court had rejected the prosecution's argument that the error was merely typographical, observing that the identical mistake appeared consistently across all documents and that Sonam was never formally informed she had been arrested for the offence of murder.
What the State Argued
Advocate General Amit Kumar, appearing for the Meghalaya government, contended that the procedural lapse caused no actual prejudice to the accused. He argued that Sonam was fully aware of the murder charge — she had signed the arrest documents, appeared before the magistrate during remand proceedings, and had legal representation from the outset. The state also relied on a Supreme Court precedent holding that procedural irregularities are curable defects where no demonstrable prejudice exists. The High Court, however, declined to interfere.
Background: The Honeymoon Murder
The case centres on the death of Raja Raghuvanshi, an Indore-based businessman who travelled to Meghalaya with his wife Sonam for their honeymoon shortly after their marriage in May 2025. The couple went missing during a visit to Sohra (Cherrapunji), triggering a large-scale search operation. Raja's body was subsequently recovered from a deep gorge near Weisawdong Falls, bearing multiple injuries.
Sonam remained untraceable for several days before being located and arrested. According to the Meghalaya Police, investigations alleged that she had conspired with an alleged lover and hired assailants to eliminate Raja during the honeymoon trip. Several other accused were also apprehended from different states. Police subsequently filed a chargesheet before the competent court, and trial proceedings are currently underway.
What Happens Next
With the High Court's order upholding bail, Sonam remains out of custody as the trial progresses. The detailed judgment from Justice Diengdoh is awaited and is expected to clarify the precise legal reasoning, particularly on whether procedural arrest errors can independently sustain bail even in serious criminal cases. The state may evaluate further legal options once the full order is available.