logo
No body no crime? How Mumbai court awarded life sentence to ex cop, absent victim's body

No body no crime? How Mumbai court awarded life sentence to ex cop, absent victim's body

Indian Express22-04-2025
On Monday (April 21), a local court in Maharashtra's Raigad district sentenced a former police inspector to life imprisonment for the murder of assistant inspector Ashwini Bidre-Gore on April 11, 2016.
The court relied on technical and circumstantial evidence to arrive at its ruling to retrace a chain of events. The court established that she had visited his house that evening, where she was killed, and that he had enlisted two associates to help him dispose of the body. The trio dismembered the body and threw it in a creek using plastic bags and weights to keep it from floating ashore.
The accused, Abhay Kurundkar claimed that the victim had not died but left for a Vipassana camp for meditation. His defence rested on the unavailability of her body or remains, as well as any trace of her DNA, blood samples and any physical evidence. Further, no murder weapon was recovered, nor were the purported plastic bags or weights in the creek, and no witnesses had seen him dispose of the body.
Can courts convict a person of murder even if the body is not found?
Special public prosecutor Pradip D Gharat said he had relied on corpus delicti to prove the crime. The Latin phrase, translating to 'body of the crime', is ironically referred to in various judgments by the Supreme Court, where the physical body of the victim of a crime is never found.
The courts have said that the discovery of the physical evidence of the body being found is not the only mode to prove that a crime has been committed. They have said that in some cases it may be impossible for the body to be recovered, hence the prosecution could rely on other evidence. According to the courts, this would mean placing other circumstances before the court which sufficiently lead to the conclusion that 'within all human probability', the person has been murdered by the accused.
'In the absence of corpus delicti what the court looks for is clinching evidence that proves that the victim has been done to death. If the prosecution is successful in providing cogent and satisfactory proof of the victim having met a homicidal death, absence of corpus delicti will not by itself be fatal to a charge of murder,' the Supreme Court said in Rishi Pal vs State of Uttarakhand, 2013, one of the judgments referred to by Gharat.
The SC judgment also refers to a time under the old English law when recovering the body was essential to convict a person of murder. It quotes judge jurist Sir Matthew Hale, 'I would never convict a person of murder or manslaughter unless the fact were proved to be done, or at least the body was found dead.' This caution was also exercised because those found guilty of murder faced the punishment of being executed. There are cited cases of murder convicts being executed in the 17th and 18th centuries, only for the 'victims' to reappear, with some having left their towns on their own.
Hence, in cases where bodies are not found, courts have cautioned of the need for 'clinching evidence'. In many of the cases citing corpus delicti, the courts have acquitted the accused for want of evidence.
What role did circumstantial evidence play in the court's decision?
In Ashwini's case, the court relied on circumstantial evidence, with the prosecution led by Gharat aiming to establish that the circumstances are 'inconsistent with the innocence claimed by the accused'.
While the accused claimed that she may have gone for Vipassana or had 'renounced the world' for spiritual reasons, the prosecution said that circumstances did not indicate that she had any such plans for the day when she went missing. For instance, she parked her car outside a railway station before leaving for Kurundkar's house, intending to return. Nor did she inform her landlord or her family, including the daughter she was fighting for the custody of, with her estranged husband.
The prosecution also said that Kurundkar was unable to explain why he had made false entries in the police logbook about being on patrolling duty on the intervening night of the crime, or getting his flat repainted without asking the landlord. The call data records showed that they were in the same location, and Kurundkar's records corresponded with other locations of interest as well, like the creek where the body was disposed of. Kurundkar's lawyer insisted that there was no evidence – nobody had seen her with him, and there was no trace of Ashwini's DNA at his flat.
'The dead body of the deceased was not found is not absolute ground to exonerate the offenders. If it is so, then that would be an excuse to like-minded offenders to commit such mischief to exonerate from the charge of murder,' additional sessions judge K G Paldewar said in his order on Monday. Kurundkar's lawyer, Vishal Bhanushali, said that they will be approaching the Bombay High Court against the order.
And how have courts dealt with such cases in the past?
01
KIRTI VYAS, 2018
In 2018, Kirti Vyas, a finance manager with salon chain BBlunt went missing in Mumbai. The police arrested two of her colleagues, claiming they had given her a lift from her home to work, strangled her in the car en route, and then disposed of the body in a secluded location, in a creek near Mahul in Chembur area of the city. While a search was conducted for the body, it was never found.
In May 2024, the sessions court in Mumbai sentenced the colleagues, Siddhesh Tamhankar and Khushi Sahjwani, to life imprisonment, observing that the police had proved that Vyas was with the two of them before she went missing.
'Hence, only the accused know what happened with Kirti inside their car and non-availability of corpus delicti will not affect the merits of the case,' the court said, relying on other evidence including a DNA match to a blood stain found in the car, CCTV footage, location of the accused, and their post-crime conduct.
02
SADICCHA SANE, 2021
MBBS student Sadiccha Sane went missing on November 29, 2021, after being spotted last at Bandra's Bandstand area, by the sea. The Mumbai Police arrested a former lifeguard and his friend in January 2023, claiming that the lifeguard had got into a scuffle with Sane after making advances towards her, causing her death. His friend, the police alleged, helped him in disposing of the body in the sea.
Sane's body, too, has not been recovered, nor has any other physical evidence. The two accused, Mithu Singh and Abdul Jabbar were granted bail by the Bombay High Court on April 2, which noted that the body was not found and other evidence can be examined at the time of the trial. The trial is yet to begin.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Two hurt after clash over ‘DJ music' at wedding in Mathura
Two hurt after clash over ‘DJ music' at wedding in Mathura

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Two hurt after clash over ‘DJ music' at wedding in Mathura

Two people suffered minor injuries after a clash broke out between two groups over the playing of 'DJ music' in a wedding procession in Mathura's Daharua in the wee hours of Sunday, police said. One arrested after a case under the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act and relevant BNS sections was registered at the Jamuna Par police station of the district They added that an arrest had been made after a case under the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act and relevant BNS sections was registered at the Jamuna Par police station of the district. 'The dispute arose over the playing of DJ songs. Two people were taken into custody, and one of them who was involved in the violence was arrested. There was no disruption in the wedding and the 'barat' moved further,' stated circle officer (Sadar) Sandeep Singh. Devendra Kumar from Daharua, in his complaint, said it was the wedding procession of his relatives. Youngsters Yashpal, Anand and Lokesh, who were named in the FIR, were standing in the way and abused the DJ over the songs being played. The three hurled casteist slurs and assaulted Devendra and his daughter Saloni, he alleged. The trio also resorted to stone pelting, the FIR states. Among the BNS sections invoked in the case are 115(2) (voluntarily causing hurt), 352 (intentional insult to provoke breach of peace), 351(3) (criminal intimidation), and 125 (endangering life). Several similar incidents have been reported in the past. In Etah, a wedding procession allegedly faced resistance while passing through a locality in Dhakpura village on June 22. On May 22, three named and two dozen unidentified persons were booked after upper caste men allegedly disrupted a 'barat' in Mathura's Bhureka.

Australian woman Erin Patterson is convicted of 3 murders for poisoning her in-laws with mushrooms
Australian woman Erin Patterson is convicted of 3 murders for poisoning her in-laws with mushrooms

The Hindu

time2 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Australian woman Erin Patterson is convicted of 3 murders for poisoning her in-laws with mushrooms

Australian woman Erin Patterson was Monday (July 7, 2025) found guilty of murdering three of her estranged husband's relatives by deliberately serving them poisonous mushrooms for lunch. The jury in the Supreme Court trial in Victoria State returned a verdict after six days of deliberations, following a nine-week trial that gripped Australia. Patterson faces life in prison and will be sentenced later, but a date for the hearing hasn't yet been scheduled. Patterson, who sat in the dock between two prison officers, showed no emotion but blinked rapidly as the verdicts were read. Three of Patterson's four lunch guests — her parents-in-law Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson — died in the hospital after the 2023 meal at her home in Leongatha, at which she served individual beef Wellington pastries containing death cap mushrooms. She was also found guilty of attempting to murder Ian Wilkinson, Heather's husband, who survived the meal. It wasn't disputed that Patterson served the mushrooms or that the pastries killed her guests. The jury was required to decide whether she knew the lunch contained death caps, and if she intended for them to die. The guilty verdicts, which were required to be unanimous, indicated that jurors rejected Patterson's defence that the presence of the poisonous fungi in the meal was a terrible accident, caused by the mistaken inclusion of foraged mushrooms that she didn't know were death caps. Prosecutors didn't offer a motive for the killings, but during the trial highlighted strained relations between Patterson and her estranged husband, and frustration that she had felt about his parents in the past. The case turned on the question of whether Patterson meticulously planned a triple murder or accidentally killed three people she loved, including her children's only surviving grandparents. Her lawyers said she had no reason to do so — she had recently moved to a beautiful new home, was financially comfortable, had sole custody of her children and was due to begin studying for a degree in nursing and midwifery. But prosecutors suggested Patterson had two faces — the woman who publicly appeared to have a good relationship with her parents-in-law, while her private feelings about them were kept hidden. Her relationship with her estranged husband, Simon Patterson, who was invited to the fatal lunch but didn't go, deteriorated in the year before the deaths, the prosecution said. The simplest facts of what happened that day and immediately afterward were hardly disputed. But Patterson's motivations for what she did and why were pored over in detail during the lengthy trial, at which more than 50 witnesses were called. The individual beef Wellington pastries Patterson served her guests was one point of friction, because the recipe she used contained directions for a single, family-sized portion. Prosecutors said that she reverted to individual servings, so she could lace the other diners' portions, but not her own, with the fatal fungi — but Patterson said that she was unable to find the correct ingredients to make the recipe as directed. Nearly every other detail of the fateful day was scrutinized at length, including why Patterson sent her children out to a film before her guests arrived, why she added additional dried mushrooms to the recipe from her pantry, why she didn't become ill when the other diners did, and why she disposed of a food dehydrator after the deaths and told investigators that she didn't own one. Patterson acknowledged some lies during her evidence — including that she'd never foraged mushrooms or owned a dehydrator. But she said that those claims were made in panic as she realized her meal had killed people. She said she didn't become as ill as the other diners since she vomited after the meal because of an eating disorder. She denied that she told her guests she had cancer as a ruse to explain why she invited them to her home that day. The bizarre and tragic case has lingered in the minds of Australians and has provoked fervor among the public and media. During the trial, five separate podcasts analyzed each day of the proceedings and several news outlets ran live blogs giving moment-by-moment accounts of more than two months of evidence. At least one television drama and a documentary about the case are slated for production. Prominent Australian crime writers were seen in court throughout the trial. As it emerged half an hour before the verdict that court was reconvening, about 40 members of the public queued outside the courthouse in the rural town of Morwell in hope of watching the outcome in person. News outlets reported that family members of the victims were not among those present. Before the verdict, newspapers published photos of black privacy screens erected at the entrance to Erin Patterson's home. Dozens of reporters from throughout Australia and from news outlets abroad crowded around friends of Patterson's as they left the courthouse Monday. 'I'm saddened, but it is what it is,' said one friend, Ali Rose, who wore sunglasses and fought back tears. Asked what she thought Patterson felt as the verdicts were read, Rose said, 'I don't know.'

Lost Rs 18 lakh in 6 months: Financial advisor's warning on online betting
Lost Rs 18 lakh in 6 months: Financial advisor's warning on online betting

India Today

time2 hours ago

  • India Today

Lost Rs 18 lakh in 6 months: Financial advisor's warning on online betting

A financial advisor recently watched one of his clients lose Rs 18 lakh in just six months. Not to stocks, not to crypto, but to online Kumar, a Sebi-registered analyst and founder of SahajMoney, shared the story in a LinkedIn post. 'One of my clients lost Rs 18 lakhs in 6 months,' he wrote. 'Not to stocks. Not to cryptos. To online betting.'advertisementThe client kept the losses hidden from his wife until the situation had already spiralled. 'He had taken a personal loan, and was borrowing from friends,' Kumar added. The rise of online betting apps, often disguised as harmless fantasy sports or casino-style games, has created a fast-growing but poorly understood problem in India's digital economy. Flashy interfaces, instant rewards, and near-constant notifications are all part of a design meant to keep users hooked. 'Betting apps are designed like slot machines,' Kumar noted. 'Flashy. Addictive. Instant dopamine hits. And they're just one swipe away.'According to him, the pattern is alarmingly familiar. It begins with a small, harmless-sounding amount—'Just Rs 500 for fun. You win once. You feel lucky. You chase the high.' But soon, the behaviour escalates.'These apps use casino psychology. Near wins. Fake bonuses. Constant notifications,' he wrote, warning that even young professionals with comfortable salaries are getting drawn in. 'I've seen it happen to young IT professionals making Rs 15 lakh a year.'The financial consequences are often severe. 'Loan apps, credit cards, even PF withdrawals,' Kumar said. 'People borrow to keep playing.'Beyond the money, the social and emotional toll is also significant. 'It destroys families,' he wrote. 'One guy told me he started lying to his wife, skipping EMIs, and hiding transactions. The stress? Unbearable.'While some Indian states have attempted to regulate online betting, national legislation is still missing. 'The Supreme Court just asked the govt if it's time for a national law. I say: long overdue.'Kumar is careful to clarify that his concern isn't about taking the fun out of digital platforms. It's about transparency and awareness. 'This isn't about being against fun. It's about understanding how these platforms exploit behavioral finance to trap users.'His message is aimed squarely at young people, often the most vulnerable to such platforms. 'If you're tempted by betting apps—pause. Think. You're not playing a game. You're playing against a system designed for you to lose.'(Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Readers are encouraged to consult a certified financial advisor before making any investment or financial decisions. The views expressed are independent and do not reflect the official position of the India Today Group.)- Ends

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store