Kerala Government Vows Appeal in High-Profile Actress Assault Case as Actor Dileep Acquitted
By Samaran, Founding Editor
WorldNow.co.in
Kochi, India – December 8, 2025
In a courtroom drama that has gripped India for nearly eight years, the Ernakulam Principal Sessions Court delivered a split verdict Monday in the infamous 2017 actress assault case, acquitting prominent Malayalam actor Dileep while convicting six other accused of kidnapping, gang rape, and conspiracy. The Kerala government swiftly announced it would challenge the acquittal in a higher court, reaffirming its “unwavering support” for the survivor amid renewed calls for justice in an industry long plagued by gender-based violence.
The case, which erupted into national headlines in February 2017, centers on the abduction and sexual assault of a leading Malayalam film actress inside a moving car en route from a shoot in Thrissur to Kochi. Masked assailants intercepted her vehicle, assaulted her repeatedly, and filmed the attack in a brazen bid to blackmail and humiliate her. The incident, captured on a memory card that became central to the trial, exposed deep-seated misogyny in the Malayalam film industry, sparking the formation of the Women in Cinema Collective (WCC) and a statewide reckoning on women’s safety.
Presiding Judge Honey M. Varghese convicted accused numbers 1 through 6—including prime suspect Sunil Kumar N.S., alias “Pulsar Suni,” a known criminal with alleged industry ties—on multiple charges under the Indian Penal Code, including Sections 120B (criminal conspiracy), 376D (gang rape), 366 (kidnapping), and provisions of the Information Technology Act for unauthorized recording and dissemination. Sentencing arguments are slated for later this week, with the convicted facing potential life imprisonment.
Dileep, real name Gopalakrishnan Padmanabhan and the eighth accused, was cleared of conspiracy charges after the prosecution failed to conclusively link him to the plot. The 56-year-old actor, once a box-office powerhouse and former Association of Malayalam Movie Artistes (AMMA) general secretary, had been arrested in July 2017 following allegations that he masterminded the assault as revenge against the survivor, who had supported his ex-wife Manju Warrier in a prior custody battle. Emerging from court to cheering supporters, Dileep decried the case as a “fabricated vendetta” orchestrated by “corrupt police,” vowing to rebuild his tarnished career.
The acquittal drew immediate backlash from women’s rights advocates and the WCC, who hailed the convictions of the direct perpetrators but decried the verdict’s failure to dismantle the alleged conspiracy at its core. “Justice remains incomplete while the shadows of power linger,” the collective said in a statement, urging a thorough probe into evidence tampering claims that plagued the trial, including unauthorized access to the assault footage.
Kerala Law Minister P. Rajeev, speaking to reporters outside the courthouse, confirmed the state’s intent to appeal the Dileep acquittal to the Kerala High Court. “The government stands with the survivor,” Rajeev declared, crediting Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan’s Left Democratic Front administration for the “unprecedented diligence” in investigation and prosecution. “We handled this with the seriousness it deserved. The acquittal does not end our pursuit of truth.” Rajeev dismissed Dileep’s police conspiracy claims as “the desperate rhetoric of the guilty,” emphasizing that the appeal would focus on overlooked evidence tying the actor to Pulsar Suni.
The trial, which began in January 2020 after multiple judicial transfers and bail battles, was marred by controversy: three witnesses turned hostile, forensic discrepancies arose over the memory card’s integrity, and Dileep’s defense painted the probe as politically motivated. The case’s ripple effects reshaped Malayalam cinema, catalyzing the 2019 Hema Committee inquiry into industry exploitation, which prompted over 30 FIRs against influential figures and led to AMMA’s overhaul amid #MeToo fervor.
As the survivor—whose identity remains protected—prepares for what her legal team called an “uphill battle” in appeals, the verdict underscores India’s ongoing struggle with high-profile sexual violence cases. Opposition leaders, including Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee chief Sunny Joseph, criticized the prosecution’s lapses in proving conspiracy, while film industry insiders brace for fallout at an emergency AMMA executive meeting.
With the appeal looming, this saga—born of a single survivor’s courage—continues to challenge the corridors of power, reminding the world that accountability in the face of celebrity and influence is a fight far from won.




































