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Sunday, January 11, 2026

A book, 'The Stolen Necklace', that played a role in a landmark court judgement


 


Caption: V. K Thajudheen (left) and Shevlin Sebastian 

On Thursday, January 8, 2026, Asaf Ali, former Director General of Prosecution and counsel for VK. Thajudheen sent me a court judgement.

These are some of the conclusions:

The court ordered the State Government to pay a total of 14 lakh in compensation.

  • 10 lakh for V.K. Thajudheen for his illegal arrest, loss of job, and mental agony.
  • 1 lakh each for his wife and three children (total 4 lakh) for the defamation and harassment they endured.

The court explicitly stated that the state is free to recover this compensation amount from the specific police officers responsible (SI P. Biju and ASIs Yogesh and T. Unnikrishnan).

The court noted that this award does not prevent Thajudheen from pursuing further civil lawsuits against the officers for larger damages.

On May 2023, my book, in collaboration with Thajudheen, called ‘The Stolen Necklace’ was published by HarperCollins detailing the trauma that he and his family went through.  

Asaf Ali told me recently that he had submitted the book to the judge among many other materials.

He feels the book played a role in this judgement. So, I am happy I was able to play a role.

Here’s what chief sub editor and senior reporter Ronnie Kuriakose wrote in The New Indian Express:

A 2023 book, The Stolen Necklace by former TNIE staffer Shevlin Sebastian, depicting the travails of Thajudheen, played its part in the case. “The book was submitted in court to make the point that the incident was no ordinary arrest, but one that gained national media attention.

It presented the telltale circumstances of the incident. And from my understanding, the court did appreciate what it conveyed,” Asaf Ali said.

On this, Thajudheen said, "I’m glad that the book, which tells my story, has helped." He also recalled sitting down with Shevlin to write. “We met every day for six months. He used to come with a flask of hot tea, and we’d sit for hours poring over the notes in discussions. Recalling some memories even brought tears to my eyes,” Thajudheen said.

Later, in 2022, the book was pitched to publishers and received positive responses. “It did well, but I did not imagine it would make its way to my defence in court as well,” he added.

The book, in addition to narrating the incident, also charts Thajudheen life, his aspirations, and how it was all derailed because of a single day. “It’s my life story. My past, present, and a robbed future,” Thajudheen concluded.

Speaking to TNIE on the development, the writer Shevlin said, “I’m so happy. Thajudheen’s whole life had come to a juddering halt because of the incident. This verdict is the first ray of light in his life after so long. I also think it will be a deterrent to police offices and put a stop to their excesses. I’m happy the book played a small role.”

May thanks to the Kerala media for extensive coverage of this ruling in print, online, radio and TV.

 

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