
Patna shooter used online haircut service, police tracked him with toll plaza data
'When we caught him, he looked completely different; he had cut his hair short. He wasn't immediately recognisable,' Solomon V Nesakumar, ACP (STF), Kolkata Police, told The Indian Express on Tuesday.
Hours after Chandan Mishra, a criminal from Buxar who was out on parole, was gunned down at Patna's Paras Hospital, CCTV footage had emerged showing Tauseef and his accomplices — armed with guns — entering his cabin, and rushing out after a few minutes.
Once police in Bihar had the footage, images of the suspects were sent out to alert police in neighbouring states, as is the practice. And then came the specific alert: Tauseef was heading towards Kolkata.
West Bengal STF IG Gaurav Sharma said, 'The Bihar STF contacted us, informing that Tauseef Khan and three others were en route to Kolkata in a vehicle, and provided us with the vehicle number.' Bihar Police had obtained this crucial information from a woman they had arrested.
With only the registration number, West Bengal STF began tracking the vehicle's movement — based on FASTag and toll plaza data — as it crossed Jharkhand. Around 10.30 pm on July 17, the vehicle was traced to Dankuni in West Bengal, before it entered Kolkata.
A key factor in the successful operation was the use of Automated Number Plate Reading (ANPR) systems. 'It's a very advanced, specialised camera. The number plates captured by these cameras are clearer, and using an algorithm, it provides clear data, making it easier to search vehicle movement,' Sharma said.
Soon after their presence in Kolkata was established, multiple teams from Kolkata Police STF and Bengal STF were put on high alert. By July 18 morning, police were confident that the suspects would attempt to leave the city, prompting them to alert all toll plazas.
ACP Nesakumar said, 'We identified a place through sheer analysis technology, ANPR. The car was in a residential area. There was a guest house.' Although the police identified Tauseef's cousin Nishu Khan, who had suffered from paralysis, he said: 'Tauseef looked totally different from what he looked like when he committed the crime. They were not armed, we arrested them.'
Tauseef, Nishu, and his caretakers Harsh and Bhim, were arrested on July 19.
They were taken to Patna on Monday after the Alipore court in Kolkata granted two days of transit remand to Bihar Police. Following medical examinations, all four were presented before the court in Patna. 'While three of the accused were sent to judicial custody, Patna Police secured remand for Tauseef for three days to conduct further interrogation in the case,' Patna Police said.
Patna SSP Kartikeya Sharma said investigation was on to establish the motive behind Mishra's killing.
Police on Tuesday arrested three more suspects – two of whom had accompanied Tauseef into the hospital – after a brief encounter in Bhojpur district of Bihar.
The encounter took place around 5 am along Katia Road under Bihia police station limits when a joint team of the Bihar STF and local police identified the three and ordered them to surrender. 'The suspects responded by opening fire, prompting retaliatory action by police. In the exchange, two of the accused, Balwant Kumar Singh and Raviranjan Kumar Singh, sustained bullet injuries. Both are currently in police custody and receiving medical treatment. A third accused, Abhishek Kumar, was arrested at the site,' a senior police officer said.
Balwant and Raviranjan were the shooters who accompanied Tauseef, police sources said. Abhishek drove the motorcycle in which Balwant and Raviranjan escaped from the hospital after the murder.
Police have also recovered two pistols, one country-made firearm, two magazines, and four live cartridges from the scene.
'During preliminary interrogation, the arrested individuals admitted to their involvement in the July 17 murder of Chandan Mishra at Paras Hospital,' an officer said.
Sweety Kumari reports from West Bengal for The Indian Express. She is a journalist with over a decade of experience in the media industry. Covers Crime, Defence, Health , Politics etc and writes on trending topics.
With a keen eye for investigative and human-interest stories. She has honed her craft across diverse beats including aviation, health, incidents etc. Sweety delivers impactful journalism that informs and engages audiences.
Sweety Kumari is a graduate of Calcutta University with an Honors degree in Journalism from Jaipuria College and a PG in Mass Communication from Jadavpur University. Originally from Bihar, she is brought up in Kolkata and completed her education from Kendriya Vidyalaya SaltLake. Multilingual, Sweety is fluent in English, Hindi, Bengali, and Maithili. She started her career as an Entertainment and lifestyle journalist with a newsportal in Kolkata. She is working with The Indian Express for 8 years now. ... Read More

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Hindu
12 hours ago
- The Hindu
Advanced street cameras, toll plaza alerts: How Patna murder accused were nabbed in Kolkata
Advanced automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) cameras, CCTV footage, alerts from toll plazas and human intelligence helped Kolkata Police and West Bengal Police nab the four accused behind the murder of Bihar-based gangster Chandan Mishra, officials of the police forces said on Tuesday (July 22, 2025). 'The four accused including the main hit man Tauseef Khan, his associate Harsh, Khan's maternal cousin Nishu Khan, and Nishu's medical assistant Bhim drove into Kolkata through the Vidyasagar Setu toll plaza at around 10.30 p.m. on July 17. Their phones were switched off, so we could only track them through the car's number plate,' an officer of the West Bengal Police's Special Task Force (STF) said. The officer added that through advanced ANPR cameras, the accused's vehicle was tracked to Sukhobrishti, a housing complex in New Town in the Kolkata-adjacent Bidhannagar. Tausif and the three other accused had reached Sukhobrishti around 11.25pm on July 17, and left from there around half an hour later. 'Bihar Police had alerted us that their local contact Ehsaan is expected to assist them at Sukhobrishti. However, Ehsaan and his friends at the housing complex did not respond to Tauseef's calls when the vehicle reached the housing. Tauseef and the others had left from there the same night, and we detained Ehsaan and four others from Sukhobrishti for interrogation,' the officer of West Bengal Police STF said. During interrogation, Ehsaan allegedly confessed to the police that Tauseef's accomplice from Patna, Sahil, had messaged him on July 17 notifying him that Tausif and his team had reached Kolkata, and that they were ready to be received at Sukhobrishti. However, Ehsaan reportedly did not respond to Tauseef's calls. The officer further added that after the vehicle left Sukhobrishti in the wee hours of July 18, its movement was again spotted at Kolkata's Park Street area at around 3:53 a.m., and was later seen near the Eastern Metropolitan Bypass. 'We thought they would make an attempt to flee from Kolkata because by the morning of July 18, media had started sharing that five people had been detained over the Patna murder. We alerted all toll plazas to secure the city's exit points, and scanned the city's hotels in the meantime,' the official said, adding that by then the Kolkata Police STF had also been alerted. A high-ranking official of the Kolkata Police STF said on Tuesday that through analysis of intelligence, traffic cameras, and by interrogating locals of the area, the accused's vehicle had been tracked to Anandapur near the Eastern Metropolitan Bypass on the evening of July 18. 'There was a guesthouse at Anandapur where a group of four men and one woman had checked in around half an hour after the vehicle had been parked in the area. We checked hotel CCTVs and identified Nishu Khan, who we knew was paralysed waist down from an earlier bullet injury,' the Kolkata Police STF officer said. He added that the prime accused, Tauseef, was difficult to identify because he had allegedly undergone a complete change in appearance by then, with the help of a barber booked through an online service. The woman accompanying them was Nishu's local contact, he said. 'We sent in teams and secured the area around the guesthouse, and shortly after, raided two rooms from where we arrested the five people. They were unarmed, and nothing significant was seized from them. Subsequently, they were arrested by Bihar Police,' the officer from Kolkata Police STF said. Bihar-based gangster Chandan Mishra was out on parole and was shot dead in an open firing inside Paras Hospital in Patna in the morning on July 17. The 'leader' of the hit team, Tauseef, and three others were arrested in Kolkata on July 18 in joint operations of the Bihar Police, West Bengal Police, and Kolkata Police.


Indian Express
12 hours ago
- Indian Express
Patna shooter used online haircut service, police tracked him with toll plaza data
AS POLICE in Bihar launched an intense search to nab him for the July 17 murder at a Patna hospital, prime suspect Tauseef Khan alias Badshah managed to flee to Kolkata and urgently availed an online service — to get a neat haircut. The ploy to change appearance almost worked, according to investigators involved in the operation to nab him from a Kolkata guesthouse two days later. 'When we caught him, he looked completely different; he had cut his hair short. He wasn't immediately recognisable,' Solomon V Nesakumar, ACP (STF), Kolkata Police, told The Indian Express on Tuesday. Hours after Chandan Mishra, a criminal from Buxar who was out on parole, was gunned down at Patna's Paras Hospital, CCTV footage had emerged showing Tauseef and his accomplices — armed with guns — entering his cabin, and rushing out after a few minutes. Once police in Bihar had the footage, images of the suspects were sent out to alert police in neighbouring states, as is the practice. And then came the specific alert: Tauseef was heading towards Kolkata. West Bengal STF IG Gaurav Sharma said, 'The Bihar STF contacted us, informing that Tauseef Khan and three others were en route to Kolkata in a vehicle, and provided us with the vehicle number.' Bihar Police had obtained this crucial information from a woman they had arrested. With only the registration number, West Bengal STF began tracking the vehicle's movement — based on FASTag and toll plaza data — as it crossed Jharkhand. Around 10.30 pm on July 17, the vehicle was traced to Dankuni in West Bengal, before it entered Kolkata. A key factor in the successful operation was the use of Automated Number Plate Reading (ANPR) systems. 'It's a very advanced, specialised camera. The number plates captured by these cameras are clearer, and using an algorithm, it provides clear data, making it easier to search vehicle movement,' Sharma said. Soon after their presence in Kolkata was established, multiple teams from Kolkata Police STF and Bengal STF were put on high alert. By July 18 morning, police were confident that the suspects would attempt to leave the city, prompting them to alert all toll plazas. ACP Nesakumar said, 'We identified a place through sheer analysis technology, ANPR. The car was in a residential area. There was a guest house.' Although the police identified Tauseef's cousin Nishu Khan, who had suffered from paralysis, he said: 'Tauseef looked totally different from what he looked like when he committed the crime. They were not armed, we arrested them.' Tauseef, Nishu, and his caretakers Harsh and Bhim, were arrested on July 19. They were taken to Patna on Monday after the Alipore court in Kolkata granted two days of transit remand to Bihar Police. Following medical examinations, all four were presented before the court in Patna. 'While three of the accused were sent to judicial custody, Patna Police secured remand for Tauseef for three days to conduct further interrogation in the case,' Patna Police said. Patna SSP Kartikeya Sharma said investigation was on to establish the motive behind Mishra's killing. Police on Tuesday arrested three more suspects – two of whom had accompanied Tauseef into the hospital – after a brief encounter in Bhojpur district of Bihar. The encounter took place around 5 am along Katia Road under Bihia police station limits when a joint team of the Bihar STF and local police identified the three and ordered them to surrender. 'The suspects responded by opening fire, prompting retaliatory action by police. In the exchange, two of the accused, Balwant Kumar Singh and Raviranjan Kumar Singh, sustained bullet injuries. Both are currently in police custody and receiving medical treatment. A third accused, Abhishek Kumar, was arrested at the site,' a senior police officer said. Balwant and Raviranjan were the shooters who accompanied Tauseef, police sources said. Abhishek drove the motorcycle in which Balwant and Raviranjan escaped from the hospital after the murder. Police have also recovered two pistols, one country-made firearm, two magazines, and four live cartridges from the scene. 'During preliminary interrogation, the arrested individuals admitted to their involvement in the July 17 murder of Chandan Mishra at Paras Hospital,' an officer said. Sweety Kumari reports from West Bengal for The Indian Express. She is a journalist with over a decade of experience in the media industry. Covers Crime, Defence, Health , Politics etc and writes on trending topics. With a keen eye for investigative and human-interest stories. She has honed her craft across diverse beats including aviation, health, incidents etc. Sweety delivers impactful journalism that informs and engages audiences. Sweety Kumari is a graduate of Calcutta University with an Honors degree in Journalism from Jaipuria College and a PG in Mass Communication from Jadavpur University. Originally from Bihar, she is brought up in Kolkata and completed her education from Kendriya Vidyalaya SaltLake. Multilingual, Sweety is fluent in English, Hindi, Bengali, and Maithili. She started her career as an Entertainment and lifestyle journalist with a newsportal in Kolkata. She is working with The Indian Express for 8 years now. ... Read More


Hans India
a day ago
- Hans India
Patna hospital murder: Gangster in Bengal jail hatched plot with help of Chandan Mishra's family associate
Kolkata: Bihar-based gangster Onkarnath Singh a.k.a. Sheru, who is currently behind bars at a correctional home at Purulia district in West Bengal, reportedly planned the murder of his opponent, Chandan Mishra, in a hospital in Patna with the help of the latter's family associate. As per the sources in the West Bengal Police, one of Mishra's family associates, who is still the 'missing link' in police terms, supplied crucial information to Sheru regarding Chandan Mishra's parole details. 'That missing link was also reportedly responsible for convincing Mishra to get admitted to the Paras Hospital in Patna as per instructions of Sheru so that the latter could plan and execute the murder easily,' the state police insider said. According to him, Sheru and Chandan had together committed various crimes in Bihar's Buxar area. After that, differences erupted over various issues between the two friends, which ultimately led to their fallout. They both decided to part ways and start their respective gangs. Eventually, the two became enemies. State police sources further said Sheru had used the close associate of Chandan, who was lodged in Beur jail, to monitor the movements and activities of the latter. "This associate was involved in the murder conspiracy. The person supplied crucial information to Sheru, which was used to plan the murder," said a police source. After receiving news that Chandan was being released on parole for 15 days, Sheru hatched a plan to murder him. The police have learned that Chandan sought medical advice from his family associate, who also happened to be a close associate of Sheru. On Sheru's instruction, that person advised Chandan to get admitted to Paras Hospital in Patna. Accordingly, Sheru hired Tauseef alias Badshah for the murder. Tauseef, the prime accused, and three others were arrested from Kolkata on Saturday in a joint operation by the Bihar Police and Special Task Force (STF) of West Bengal Police. Police sources said that Sheru first asked Badshah to find out which hospital would be convenient for them to execute the murder. "Badshah had suggested Paras Hospital in Patna as he was born and raised in the Phulwari Sharif area of Patna. He knew the area like the back of his hand, and Paras Hospital is not far from there. Sheru told Chandan's family associate about it. The associate then asked Chandan to get treated at Paras Hospital," said the police source. It was also learned that Badshah had visited one of his associates undergoing treatment at Paras Hospital several times in the last few days. He had learned about the lack of security in the hospital and chose it as a convenient place to conduct the operation. After killing Chandan Mishra, Badshah and his associates entered Bengal from Bihar at Sheru's advice. "We are looking for that associate. The phone calls and WhatsApp chats of others, including the arrested Tauseef, are being examined to get information about that person," said a police officer.