Everyone is entitled to presumptions of the guilt or innocence of a convict. And this applies equally to those who hold high public office as it does to ordinary citizens. But it is one thing for Jayant Sinha, Union Minister of State for Civil Aviation, to have serious reservations about the verdict of the fast track court in Jharkhand that convicted, and sentenced, a bunch of people to life imprisonment in a cow vigilantism case. It is quite another to felicitate those convicted merely because they were let out on bail by the Jharkhand High Court. A release on bail, as Mr. Sinha surely knows, is not an acquittal. The eight garlanded men he posed with for celebratory photos are still convicts, who were tried in a case in which a meat trader was savagely beaten to death on suspicion of transporting beef. That a Central Minister could have hobnobbed in such a public fashion with those convicted of murder is inexcusable. As a lawmaker, he ought to have known that doing so would raise inevitable questions in the public mind about his commitment to the rule of law and his lack of faith in the criminal justice system. In doing what he did, he allowed his personal beliefs to trump his public responsibilities. Mr. Sinha has declared that he is against any kind of vigilantism and all forms of violence. His defence for his grave lapse lies in a fine distinction. He believes there is a difference between the eight who were let out on bail and some others who participated in the murderous assault. While it is true that the group of eight was released from prison on the ground that the available visual evidence showed them only as onlookers as opposed to assaulters, the Jharkhand High Court's