Tattoo on dead teen's hand helps police crack 8-year-old murder

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April 14, 2017

New Delhi, Apr 14: A lucky tip-off and the letter 'A' tattooed on the right hand of an 18-year-old girl has helped police crack a sensational murder that took place in 2008.

TattooThe story begins in 2006, when 16-year-old Aarti fell for a neighbourhood boy in Sultanpuri, west Delhi. They dated for two years and when she turned 18, the two moved in together.

Initially, life was good. The boy, Brijender alias Rinku, showered Aarti with gifts and brought her flowers. Her parents left them alone seeing their daughter happy. But soon things started changing and by September, 2008, the two were regularly fighting over petty things.

Around the end of the month, Aarti went missing.

A few days later, her worried parents received a letter in which Aarti -the letter bore her signature -claimed she had fallen in love with another man and eloped with him. This was a shock for her old parents but they gradually learnt to live with it. Rinku also "moved on".

He sold his house, shifted a short distance away to Aman Vihar and even married a girl from Patel Nagar in October 2009. In his first partner's memory , he started calling his wife Aarti. They have three sons, aged seven, five and two.

"On April 11 this year, the crime branch team led by ACP Jasbir Singh got a tipoff from a source about the involvement of Rahul in a murder eight years ago. Rahul was nabbed and he led us to Rinku, the main conspirator of the crime," said district commissioner of police (crime) Bhisham Singh. Rinku's interrogation revealed sensational details. Fed up of their growing fights, Rinku said he decided to eliminate Aarti. On the night of September 23, he took her signatures on a blank paper and then throttled her to death, Rinku told the cops.

After this, he hired an auto and made the body sit on the rear seat with him. He told the driver that his wife was possessed by evil powers and he was taking her to Najafgarh for exorcism, police said.

"Thereafter, he took the body to Najafgarh and called body to Najafgarh and called his friend Rahul for help. Rahul came in uncle's car to dispose of the body. They drove to Surakhpur Road and dumped it in bushes after crushing her face with stones to hide her identity ," DCP Singh added.

The body was recovered a day later but it could never be identified. Police cremated the body later as per procedure.

After a few days had passed, Rinku sent the fake letter to Aarti's father through a tea vendor. The signature on the letter was real as it was written on the blank paper which Aarti had signed before her death, Rinku has confessed.

The letter had said that she had eloped with an advocate's son and was living happily . It requested the parents not to search for or try to contact her as she was leaving Delhi.

Aarti's father had taken ill due to shock and passed away a few years later. Rinku has also told cops that he started calling his second wife Aarti so that no one asked or searched for her in his colony as many people knew about their affair.

Aarti's mother and two brothers still live in Sultanpuri. On the duo's disclosure, cops fished out the inquest report of the unidentified dead body found eight years ago from the area described by the killers.

The family confirmed that Aarti had the letter `A' tattooed on her right hand, which matched the police's description of the body.

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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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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
July 12,2020

Tamil Nadu, Jul 12: An alleged attempt by a 19-year-old man to "open a branch of the State Bank of India" at Panruti near Tamil Nadu was scuttled and he was arrested for forgery, police said on Saturday.

The man, son of retired SBI employees, had readied fake seals and challans of the public sector lender, and had other paraphernalia like a cash counting machine needed "to run a bank branch," on an upper floor of his residence at Panruti, about 25 km from Tamil Nadu.

He had not, however, put up any signboard. The SBI Panruti branch manager lodged a complaint with police seeking action following a tip-off by a customer that the man was "opening an SBI branch and has challans as well."

A printer who printed the challans and another who had made fake seals were held for similar offences and abetment.

They were produced before a magistrate court and enlarged on bail.

Asked if the man had cheated people by soliciting deposits or facilitating loans, Panruti police inspector K Ambethkar said, "no..we have not received any such complaint so far."

The man's late father had worked for SBI and his mother had retired from the same bank some time back, he said.

To a question, the police inspector said the man's mother, who has mobility issues, and another woman a relative living in the same house had no clue about his "idea."

Investigations revealed that he aspired to work for a bank and since he had closely watched banking operations for long he was "very knowledgeable" about it.

On the suspected motive, he said several of his replies were incomprehensible, childish, and strange notwithstanding his excellent understanding of the banking processes.

"He even calmly told us that he awaited approval from Mumbai to open the (SBI) branch and that he was about to put up a signboard," the inspector said, adding that the man had tried unsuccessfully to get employment on compassionate grounds in the SBI following the death of his father in harness.

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