A Delhi court has convicted former Aam Aadmi Party councillor Tahir Hussain for the murder and kidnapping of Intelligence Bureau officer Ankit Sharma [1].

The verdict marks a significant legal conclusion to one of the most high-profile killings associated with the communal violence that gripped the city in 2020 [1].

The court found that Hussain and several co-accused formed an unlawful assembly to abduct and kill Sharma during the riots [2]. The judgment, delivered on July 13, 2026 [5], held Hussain accountable for murder, kidnapping, and rioting [1].

While the court convicted Hussain, reports vary on the exact number of co-defendants found guilty. Some records indicate four others were convicted alongside him [2], while other reports state five others were convicted [4]. The court did, however, drop the conspiracy charge against Hussain [1].

Six other accused individuals were acquitted in the case [3]. The prosecution said that the group acted in concert to carry out the abduction and subsequent killing of the IB officer [2].

The 2020 Delhi riots resulted in widespread violence and numerous casualties across the northeast region of the city [1]. This specific case focused on the targeted abduction of Sharma, a government official, which elevated the gravity of the charges beyond general rioting.

A Delhi court has convicted former Aam Aadmi Party councillor Tahir Hussain for the murder and kidnapping of Intelligence Bureau officer Ankit Sharma.

This conviction provides a legal resolution to a pivotal case from the 2020 Delhi riots, specifically addressing the targeted killing of a state intelligence official. By convicting a former political figure, the court has established a precedent for individual accountability among local leaders during periods of civil unrest, even as the dismissal of conspiracy charges and the acquittal of six others suggest a narrow evidentiary focus on the physical act of the murder rather than a broader organized plot.