Bangalore techie found dead in the US

safia@coastaldigest.com (DHNS)
June 27, 2012

techie


Bangalore, June 27: The mysterious death of Pawan Kumar Anjaiah, a software engineer from Bangalore, in Delaware, US, on June 19, has left his parents here completely shaken, even as the Delaware police claimed it was a suicide triggered by his alleged murder of an American woman.

The mystery only deepened with the police attributing the 26-year-old’s death to drug abuse and excess consumption of alcohol, a claim vociferously dismissed by his parents who stay in Bangalore.

The police collected body samples and sent them to pathology to ascertain the exact name and quantity of the drugs consumed. Pawan’s body has been kept in a freezer of a local hospital in Belleville, sources said.

Pawan, a software engineer with Cognizant Technologies, was found dead inside the room of a lodge on June 19 around 1:30 pm in Belleville city in Wayne County in the US state of Michigan.

Pawan had flown to the United States with a ‘H-1B’visa in March 2011 and was scheduled to return in the first week of July.

The Delaware police had issued an arrest warrant against him for allegedly stabbing a 26-year-old teacher, identified as Danielle Mehlman, mother of a four-year-old boy at Dewey Beach, in what was the first murder in the coastal town’s history.

Pawan reportedly met her through an online dating website. Pawan’s family members in Bangalore said they did not know why Pawan ended life and were not willing to buy the suicide theory.

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News Network
July 4,2020

Kolkata, Jul 4: Two people were killed and around four injured when the bombs they were allegedly manufacturing went off inside a house in Murshidabad district, a senior police officer said on Saturday.

Their identities were yet to be established as the condition of those injured and undergoing treatment at a hospital was still "critical", he said.

The thatched roof of the house, where they were allegedly making bombs, also blew off in the explosion, which occurred at Suti town in Jangipur subdivision of the district around 9:00 pm on Friday, the officer said.

The house has been damaged completely, and its owner is on the run, he said.

As of now, the wife of the house owner is being questioned in connection with the incident, the officer added.

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Agencies
July 22,2020

Mathura, Jul 22: A local court in Uttar Pradesh's Mathura on Wednesday sentenced 11 policemen, including the then Deputy Superintendent of Police, to life imprisonment in a case pertaining to the murder of royal Raja Man Singh in 1985.

District Judge Sadhana Rani Thakur announced the life imprisonment sentence a day after holding them guilty of the killing. Three policemen were, however, acquitted. Four men died during the trial.

The policemen were convicted under Section 302 (murder), 148 (rioting) and 149 (Every member of unlawful assembly guilty of offence committed in prosecution of common object) of the Indian Penal Code.

The verdict comes 35 years after Man Singh was killed. He, along with two others, was shot dead in police firing a day after he crashed his jeep into the then Rajasthan Chief Minister Shiv Charan Mathur's helicopter in a fit of anger.

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News Network
January 15,2020

New Delhi, Jan 15: The CBI has booked 17 individuals and companies, including three Mumbai-based senior Customs officials, for allegedly being part of a money laundering racket using over-invoiced import of diamonds worth more than Rs 156 crore, official said on Tuesday.

The case was referred to the CBI after a Directorate of Revenue Intelligence probe found alleged involvement of Customs officials in the conspiracy, they said.

The DRI probe had alleged that Hong Kong-based businessman Girish Kadel had imported rough diamonds from Switzerland to Hong Kong in the name of his four companies.

Kadel, who had business interests in India, had exported some of these diamonds to India through 14 consignments in the name of two companies Antique Exim Pvt Ltd and Tanman Jewels showing over-invoiced value of Rs 156.28 crore.

The DRI had found during revaluation that actual value of the consignment was Rs 1.03 crore instead of falsely declared value of Rs 156.28 crore, they said.

The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has alleged that Kadel used Import Export Codes (IECs) of Antique Exim Private Ltd and Tanman Jewels through his aide Atul Paldecha for siphoning off the money outside India through import of over-valued diamonds, the officials said.

Rough diamonds were imported at "highly exaggerated value" to siphon off excess foreign exchange overseas to cover the differential cost of other imports and park money abroad for unlawful activities.

It is alleged that the then Commissioner APSC Mumbai, Vinay Brij Singh, influenced subordinate officers to give favourable report, they said.

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