"I will start crying," he maintained if he was acquitted but will "face it" if the verdict went the other way around. "I have to", Dutt said.
With Terrorism and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act (TADA) court judge Kode delivering a mixed verdict Tuesday - finding him guilty of illegal possession of arms, but absolving him of the charges of the larger conspiracy in the 1993 Mumbai terror bombings that killed 257 people - Dutt must surely be a relieved person.
"After due reasoning during the trial, I did not find him to be a terrorist," special judge P.D. Kode said.
This is the best Dutt could have bargained for, considering that a conviction under TADA would have virtually snuffed out his film career, sending him back to the cooler in Arthur Jail where he spent 18 long months in 1993-94.
In fact, it is a verdict that should gladden the hearts of the inhabitants of Imperial Heights - the Dutt residence at Pali Hill - who have been on tenterhooks ever since Kode started giving his verdicts in one of the most widely anticipated trials in the country's history in September.
His ebullient co-star in the blockbuster "Lage Raho Munnabhai", Arshad Warsi, succinctly summed the verdict.
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