In a murder plot that is too dramatic and scary even for movies, a 30-year-old employee of a local health centre in Greater Noida strangled and killed a 22-year-old girl on the pretext of marrying her.
First, to deflect attention from himself, Kaushik requested Madhuri to go through a fake wedding with her former boyfriend Rahul. This he did, so that once Madhuri was murdered, the cops would suspect Rahul and not him.
The Times of India reports, like Kaushik had planned Madhuri's parents suspected Rahul and the police arrested him. However, surveillance of phone records in the area revealed constant communication between the two numbers bought by Kaushik under fake identities. This led to Kaushik who revealed his entire plot to the police and has now been charged with murder and kidnapping.
The police cracked the murder case of Priyanka Siddhesh Gurav (23) by arresting her husband, in laws and an imitation jewellery maker on Friday night. The police had found a body with a missing head and legs in a nullah in Mahape in Navi Mumbai on May 6.
First came the fake wedding. Then choreographed caste tension. And finally an elopement. A 22-year-old woman did everything her lover told her to, believing it was the only way they could get married. But all he was doing was meticulously laying out an elaborate plot that had only one ending: her murder.
So, Kaushik went about planting one red herring after another in a way that no one ever suspected him as he led Madhuri down the path that would end in murder. It took the police 10 days of investigation to get to him. Kaushik was picked up from his home on Friday night. He broke down during interrogation and confessed, revealing a near-flawless plot built on lies, deception and the trust of a woman who blindly believed the man she loved.
The murder was at least six months in the making. Kaushik told police that he started working on his plan when Madhuri started insisting on marriage. He apparently told her they would elope but Kaushik would have to deflect attention from himself for that. He asked her if she would be willing to go through a fake wedding for their cause, and she agreed, a police officer said.
Police said during the investigation, they found there was constant communication between two mobile phone numbers from December 23-26. But December 26 onwards, both phones had been switched off. The location of one number was frequently near Kaushik's home. That got the cops interested. During interrogation, Kaushik told the cops he had bought two SIM cards on fake identity cards and given one to Madhuri. Both phones were found with him. Madhuri's decomposed body was dug out and sent for an autopsy. Kaushik has been charged with murder and kidnapping.
Geetha Madhuri intentionally provoked Kaushal into a heated argument as part of the secret task. She made Shyamala to dance with her. She fed bread to Samrat. Same way, she finished tasks with Amit and Deepthi. As and when she completed the task, Bigboss announced those candidates as dead. Actually those tasks look silly but at the same time if it is not for Geetha and her bizarre attitude, Police and detective could have identified the murderer.
After Geetha Madhuri completed all the tasks given to her, the murder task came to an end. Bigg Boss asked Roll Rida and Ganesh Now announced the name of the suspect. They have a chance to question the suspects. However roll Rida and Ganesh failed to figure out who the murderer is and they got it wrong as they announced it is Tanish. After both of them failed, Bigg Boss announced that it is Geetha Madhuri who is the murderer. So as per the agreement, she got immunity for nomination. Not only that she can nominate one Housemate for rest of the season. She told name of Kaushal. Kaushal was seen very much disappointed with this.
Upon receiving information, Piduguralla police rushed to the spot and shifted the bodies to a government hospital for postmortem. The police also recovered the murder weapon and launched a manhunt for the accused.
Four days after the 23-year-old woman, who died early this morning, was gang-raped in a Delhi bus, the headlines of the Deccan Herald read, "Minor Raped in City Shop." A 15-year-old girl in Bangalore (where I live) went to the corner shop (we all have one) and didn't come home. Her family discovered her there, nearly naked, hands and legs bound with her own dupatta. She reported that the shopkeeper and his two friends had teased her, pushed her inside, closed the shutters and raped her. The Delhi rape also received front-page coverage. The remaining pages of the same issue contained the news of a young boy's murder, two suicides, a kidnapping hostage found dead in a canal, a five-year-old sexually abused in Bidar, two separate road accidents in which a total of seven people perished, the death of a militant in Kashmir and that of a civilian in Manipur, both during military encounters.
We have developed, in this country, a capacity for living alongside tragedy and neglect and suffering, a way of moving through our cities with a firm clamp on our senses and our hearts and our minds. It is a deadness that creeps into all aspects of our lives. Garbage piles up on our streets, but we have learned not to smell it. The din of traffic is deafening, but we have discovered the trick of blocking it out. We step over feces on the pavement -- dog, human, cow -- without pausing in our conversations. We avert our eyes from the man urinating against the wall. From the child with the rheumy eyes and bloated belly. From the woman curled up in the corner. From the collapsing buildings and factory fires and army encounters in remote forests, from the murders and suicides and rapes. From all that is too much. We draw back into ourselves, into our homes, shrinking and shoring up our lives until they end at our doorsteps. What lies beyond is, to us, a broken world, impossible to comprehend or control, and so each time we step into it we are half-asleep, fully armored, already prepared to ignore what we know we will find.
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