Sarath Ambepitiya
Sarath Ambepitiya | |
---|---|
Judge of the High Court of Colombo | |
Personal details | |
Born | November 19, 1946 |
Died |
20 November 2004 58) Colombo | (aged
Nationality | Sri Lankan |
Alma mater |
Royal College Colombo, Sri Lanka Law College |
Sarath Ambepitiya (November 19, 1946 – November 20, 2004) was a Sri Lankan judge. He was serving as the Judge of the Colombo High Court when he was assassinated. The assassination, committed by orchestrated by a drug lord sentenced by the Judge gripped the nation and forced the government to crack down on organized crime.
Education
Educated at the Royal College, Colombo, Ambepitiya entered the Sri Lanka Law College to study law and called the bar as an attorney at law.
Career
After practicing law for some time, he joined the judiciary in 1977 and served as a Magistrate in many parts of the island. Later he was appointed Chief Magistrate of Colombo and then Additional District Judge of Colombo. Ambepitiya's first appointment as a High Court Judge was in Galle, after which he was appointed as a High Court Judge in Colombo. He was a noted for his fearlessness in making strong judgments and taking up cases that other judges feared to accept. Ambepitiya presided over many important criminal cases including the Central Bank bombing.
Murder
He was shot dead by assassins at his home along with his bodyguard, Police Inspector Upali Bandara, on November 20, 2004. At the time of his death he was one of the most senior Judges of the High Court and was expected to be promoted to the Court of Appeal. Only the day before he had 58th birthday with a visit to the Kelaniya temple. The Chief Justice described Ambepitiya as "the most fearless judicial officer we had. His death is a great loss to the judiciary".[1]
Culprits
Five men were indicted over the murder of Ambepitiya. This included the alleged mastermind, Mohammed Niyas Naufer alias Potta Naufer on charges of conspiracy to commit murder; and Sujith Rohana Rupasinghe, Suminda Nishantha, Udara Perera and Lasantha Kumara, who were alleged to have carried out the murder. On July 4, 2005, amid high security and following a three-month trial, a High Court Trial-at-Bar reached a unanimous verdict finding the five men guilty of murdering Ambepitiya and his bodyguard. All five were sentenced to death by hanging.[2]
References
External links
One of the decent judges in Sri Lanka