
Two who looted bizman in guise of sadhus arrested
The accused allegedly stopped the victim under the pretext of seeking donations for Nag Panchami and then fled with his gold chain and cash.
The victim, Rohan Kashyap, a resident of Shakarpur, New Delhi, was headed towards his aunt's residence in Munshipulia when the incident occurred on Tuesday.
According to Alambagh SHO Subhash Chandra Saroj, as Kashyap slowed his vehicle near the Old Jail crossing, two men dressed in saffron robes and smeared in ash—posing as sadhus—approached his car seeking daan (donation). As soon as he rolled down the window, they snatched his gold chain and a purse containing Rs 4,500 in cash and quickly fled the scene.
Following the FIR, DCP Central Ashish Srivastava said police examined CCTV footage from the surrounding area and traced the suspects to the Devi Khera crossing. Both accused —identified as Vicky Nath and Arun Nath, residents of Sonepat, Haryana were arrested. The looted gold chain and Rs 4,500 cash were recovered from their possession, said ACP Cantonment Abhay Pratap Mall.
Both have been booked under relevant IPC sections, including robbery and impersonation. They are currently in police custody, and further legal proceedings are underway.

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New Indian Express
23 minutes ago
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Operation Ghostbuster: Major General VK Dutta on the hunt he led for Rajiv Gandhi's assassins
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The team had also been armed with an antidote to cyanide poisoning, "a first in the world but one that had to be administered intravenously within 30 seconds for it to take effect". It was a mission with no margins of error. Posters seeking information on Sivarasan were plastered everywhere, including behind buses and autorickshaws. General Dutta's team was flooded with hundreds of calls daily, even from people who wanted to settle a score with their neighbours, saying Sivarasan had been sighted at multiple addresses! "So, we decided to base our searches on the last confirmed location of Sivarasan. From there, we started drawing a circle of 250 kilometres radius and five hours. We decided that we will only concentrate on areas that fell within that radius while launching our searches," General Dutta remembers. "Even after this, we ended up carrying out three to four raids every day," he adds. 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