Sonam Raghuvanshi Bail Challeng Honeymoon Murder Case HC

Honeymoon Murder Case Update | Meghalaya Govt Challenges Sonam Raghuvanshi’s Bail Before High Court Over “Technical Errors” In Arrest Papers

Meghalaya High Court has issued notice and will examine whether the repeated police errors flagged by the Shillong Court were enough to justify bail in the Raja Raghuvanshi murder case.

MEGHALAYA: The Meghalaya Government has moved the Meghalaya High Court against the Shillong Court order granting bail to Sonam Raghuvanshi, accused in the alleged murder of her husband Raja Raghuvanshi during their honeymoon trip. The matter was heard before Justice W. Diengdoh.

The State argued that the lower court gave too much importance to technical mistakes in police paperwork despite the seriousness of the murder allegations. Bail was earlier granted after the Shillong Court found that police repeatedly mentioned the wrong BNS section in arrest documents. Instead of Section 103(1) BNS for murder, documents mentioned Section 403(1) BNS.

The Shillong Court had observed:

“…such error cannot occur in all documents. Infact, in all documents pertaining to Sonam Raghuvanshi, from the check list for justification of arrest, memo of arrest, inspection memo, intimation of rights of the arrested person, extract of case dairy, the sections referred to in all the documents is Sohra PS Case No. 7/2025 u/s 403(1)/238(a)/309(6)/3(6) BNS. In none of the documents has the petitioner been intimated that she is arrested for the offence u/s 103(1) BNS. Even in the formats of the intimation of grounds of arrest it is observed that specific facts constituting the offence has not been communicated to the accused person.”

Appearing for the State, Advocate General Amit Kumar argued that Sonam was fully aware she was facing murder charges, as she had legal representation, signed arrest papers and participated in earlier bail proceedings.

The State also relied on the Supreme Court judgment in State of Karnataka v. Sri Darshan Etc.and argued that such procedural irregularities are curable defects unless actual prejudice is proved.

During the hearing, Justice Diengdoh questioned why the same mistake appeared repeatedly in multiple documents. The Court also orally observed that the arrest forms appeared template-based and may not have been properly explained to the accused.

The Advocate General submitted:

“There is no prejudice to the respondent at any point of time…In her fourth bail plea, it has been stated that I have not been informed of the grounds of arrest…your transit order, transit remand, your chargesheet, framing of chargesheet, every time you had the information that you have been arrested for the offence of Murder”

The State further argued that the accused had high chances of absconding. However, the Court observed that strict bail conditions were already in place. The matter will now be heard again on June 1.

According to police, Raja and Sonam got married on May 12, 2025 and later travelled to Meghalaya for their honeymoon. Raja’s body was later found in a gorge near Weisawdong Falls, while police alleged that the murder was pre-planned with the help of Sonam’s alleged lover and others.

The case has again raised public debate over how husbands in matrimonial-related crimes often become forgotten victims while criminal proceedings increasingly shift focus towards procedural defects instead of the death itself.

Explanatory Table: Laws & Sections Involved

Section / LawPurposeRelevance In This Case
Section 103(1) BNSPunishment for MurderPolice claimed accused was arrested for murder under this section
Section 403(1) BNSDishonest Misappropriation of PropertyWrong section allegedly mentioned repeatedly in arrest documents
Section 238(a) BNSRelated to disappearance or destruction of evidenceMentioned in FIR and arrest papers
Section 309(6) BNSCriminal conspiracy / common intention related provisionMentioned as part of prosecution allegations
Section 3(6) BNSGeneral liability provision under BNSIncluded in arrest documents
Bail JurisprudenceLaw governing grant or cancellation of bailCentral issue before Meghalaya High Court
State of Karnataka v. Sri Darshan Etc.Supreme Court ruling on procedural irregularitiesState argued procedural mistakes alone cannot justify bail unless prejudice is proved

Case Details

  • Case Title: State of Meghalaya v. Sonam Raghuvanshi
  • Court: Meghalaya High Court
  • Bench: Justice W. Diengdoh
  • Petitioner: State of Meghalaya
  • Respondent/Accused: Sonam Raghuvanshi
  • State Counsel: Advocate General Amit Kumar, Senior Advocate

Key Takeaways

  • A husband lost his life, yet the legal battle is now centred more around paperwork defects than the victim himself.
  • The case highlights how procedural lapses can sometimes overshadow the gravity of allegations in serious matrimonial crimes involving men as victims.
  • Meghalaya High Court questioned repeated police errors, but the State argued that the accused always knew she was facing murder charges.
  • The matter raises wider concerns about how husbands in relationship-related crimes often receive limited public sympathy compared to dominant narrative-building around the accused.
  • The case reflects a growing legal trend where technical irregularities in arrest and investigation increasingly become decisive factors even in high-profile murder prosecutions.


Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the Indian courts and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of “ShoneeKapoor.com” or its affiliates. This article is intended for informational and educational purposes only. The content provided is not legal advice, and viewers should not act upon this information without seeking professional counsel. Viewer discretion is advised.

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