MUMBAI, May 6: Superstar Salman Khan was today convicted of culpable homicide and sentenced to five years imprisonment in the 2002 hit-and-run case but escaped being sent to jail after the Bombay High Court granted him interim bail till May 8 when it will hear his plea against conviction. The High Court granted interim relief to the 49-year-old actor on the ground that he had been handed over only a 2-page operative part of the sessions court verdict and not a detailed order explaining the reasons for his conviction. Like the twists and turns that characterised the prolonged trial in the over 12-year-old case, the actor was sentenced to five years rigorous imprisonment by sessions court judge D W Deshpande and placed under arrest immediately thereafter, only to be allowed a 48-hour breather by the High Court. Minutes after the judgement was pronounced in a packed courtroom, Salman’s lawyers moved the High Court in appeal against conviction and seeking bail. Justice A M Thipsay of the Bombay High Court offered a breather to the beleagured actor when he granted him interim bail accepting the plea of his senior counsel Harish Salve. “So far, we have only got a two-page operative part of the judgement but not a detailed copy giving reasons for the conviction,” Salve said, seeking interim protection. “The urgency in the matter is that the appellant (Salman) who was on bail throughout the trial is likely to be taken into custody today. However, the copy of the order has not been delivered yet,” Justice Thipsay said, adding “in all fairness and in the interest of justice” the actor should be protected till the time a copy of the reasoned order regarding his conviction is furnished to him. He also said, “The order could have been pronounced when the copy was ready. Why was the order pronounced today. It should not have been delivered if the copy is not ready.” The judge also directed the actor to execute a fresh bond before the trial court today itself. Earlier in the day, sessions judge Deshpande convicted the hugely popular actor of culpable homicide not amounting to murder for running his Toyota Land Cruiser over a group of people sleeping on the pavement outside American Express bakery in suburban Bandra that left one dead and four others wounded. He was awarded five years’ rigorous imprisonment under the charge of culpable homicide, the crime which attracts a maximum punishment of 10 years. Salman was also found guilty of offences under Section 279 IPC (rash and negligent driving) and Sections 337 and 338 IPC (causing hurt by acts endangering life or personal property of others), which prescribes six months jail. Besides, he was sentenced to undergo jail for six months under Sections 181 (driving without licence) and 185 of Motor Vehicles Act (driving under liquor). Salman was found guilty under the Bombay Prohibition Act under section 66 (a) and (b) for which he received two months imprisonment and fine of Rs 500. All sentences will run concurrently. The sessions judge rejected Salman’s contention that his driver Ashok Singh was at the wheel at the time of accident and accepted the prosecution’s plea that the actor was drunk while driving and also did not have a driving licence. “All charges have been proved against you…What you have to say? the judge asked Salman who was in the dock. “I hold that you were driving the vehicle. You were intoxicated. I also do not agree with your plea that the person who had died had received fatal injuries after a crane dropped the car on the persons underneath while removing it,” the judge said, rejecting the defence’s claim that the actor’s driver Ashok Singh was at the wheel when the accident took place. Salman, known for his macho onscreen persona, was in tears when Judge Deshpande pronounced the verdict. The actor, attired in a white shirt and light blue denim jeans, however, insisted, “I was not driving the car…But I respect your decision and accept it. My lawyer will speak on my behalf.” Salman’s bothers Arbaaz and Sohail, sisters Alvira and Arpita, besides long-time bodyguard Shera stood beside him in the courtroom which, barring the media, court staff and the lawyers, was declared out of bounds for others. A huge crowd of his fans had collected outside the court premises in Fort area of south Mumbai, throwing normal traffic into disarray. Since the fateful night of September 28, 2002 when the accident took place, the case saw several twists and turns. Salman was initially booked under various provisions of IPC, Motor Vehicles Act, 1988, and Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949. In October 2002, Mumbai Police invoked section 304-II of IPC (culpable homicide) against him, which he challenged in a sessions court in March 2003. The sessions court rejected his plea and ordered the magisterial court to frame charges. Aggrieved, Salman moved the Bombay High Court, which ruled that the charge of culpable homicide was not applicable in the case. Maharashtra Government then challenged the HC order in Supreme Court, which ruled that the magistrate may decide whether section 304-II of IPC could be applied. In October 2006, the Metropolitan Magistrate framed charges against the actor for the offence of rash and negligent driving, which attracts punishment upto only two years, besides other penal provisions, but not for culpable homicide. In October 2011, the prosecution demanded that Salman Khan must be tried under harsher sections. Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate V S Patil, who was then conducting the trial, abruptly terminated it on December 23, 2013, after examining 17 witnesses, invoked the charge of culpable homicide not amounting to murder, and committed the case to the sessions court for trial. Before the quantum of sentence was pronounced today, prosecutor Pradeep Gharat sought deterrent punishment for Salman saying a strong message should go to the society that such acts would be dealt with seriously. Gharat said he did not agree with Salman’s argument that the mishap was an act of God. “It was a serious offence and maximum punishment should be awarded to the accused,” he said. Automobiles have become a death trap due to careless driving and a message should go to the society that in such cases the accused cannot get away with a lighter punishment, the prosecutor said. On the other hand, the actor’s lawyer Srikant Shivade said, “Salman’s case was on a better footing than the Alistair Pereira and Sanjeev Nanda BMW cases in which more than 5 persons were killed. In the Alistair case, seven people were killed and a bottle of liquor was found in the car.” In keeping with an earlier direction of the Bombay High Court, Salman had also deposited Rs 19 lakh as compensation for the victims in 2002 itself, said his lawyer. The HC’s order had come while hearing a PIL. The lawyer further said that in 2007, the actor had started Salman Khan Foundation and an NGO ‘Being Human’ to serve the society. He has done a lot of community service, his lawyer said and submitted to the court the balance sheet of these organisations to show the charity work done by them. The lawyer appealed to the court to take a “compassionate” view while awarding the sentence. The defence lawyer also produced a physician’s certificate which said the actor had a neurological problem which could aggravate, if proper care was not taken. He urged the court to also take this into consideration while awarding the sentence. However, when Salman gestured to him not to raise this issue, the lawyer told the court that he was not pressing the plea. In a related development, the court rejected the plea of activist Santosh Daundkar seeking action against the police for perjury (giving false evidence under oath) for examining a wrong set of doctors in the trial, thereby delaying the process of justice. He had also sought action against the police for not examining a key witness—singer Kamaal Khan, who was in the vehicle at the time of mishap. Dismissing Daundkar’s plea as “frivolous”, the court imposed a cost of Rs 10,000 on the activist. (PTI)