Indeed, lawyers of the 16 accused in the AMRI case have filed several petitions. For instance, in September 2015, a day after the Supreme Court delivered judgment on the 18-year-old Uphaar case (in 1997, after a fire in Delhi’s Uphaar Cinema killed 59 people, mostly spectators, the owners were charged with criminal negligence) and waived punishment for the accused (in a later judgment in February 2017, the SC sentenced accused Gopal Ansal to a year’s imprisonment), Anindya Mitra, lawyer of AMRI accused and industrialist R.S. Agarwal, appealed to the Calcutta High Court that it direct a lower court to hear a plea seeking the quashing of charges against his clients. At that time, the AMRI victims’ families were appealing to the Calcutta HC for a speedy trial, prompting the defence lawyers to plead, in a separate appeal, that their petition be admitted before that of the families’. When asked about the 2015 appeal for exemption, Mitra tells Outlook, “It was for a very specific part of the case.... Beyond that I cannot comment.”