
Heroin worth Rs 12 crore, arms cache seized from Rajasthan's Sriganganagar
Sriganganagar police apprehended five individuals linked to the Lawrence Bishnoi gang, seizing a substantial stash of foreign-made firearms and heroin valued at Rs 12 crore
JAIPUR:
Sriganganagar police
Tuesday arrested five accused with alleged links to the
Lawrence Bishnoi gang
and seized a huge cache of foreign-made weapons and heroin worth Rs 12 crore. Police said the gang was being handled by a member of the Bishnoi gang from aboard and may have received the consignment from Pakistan.
Police recovered seven pistols — six Glocks and one Turkey-made Zigana — along with 13 magazines and 32 live cartridges.
Each of these pistols is estimated to be worth around Rs 15 lakh in the black market. Officers also suspect the confiscated heroin to have been smuggled from Pakistan.
A car and a motorcycle used for trafficking were also seized.
Key highlights
Five arrested by Sriganganagar police with alleged links to the Lawrence Bishnoi gang.
Foreign-made weapons seized, including six Glock pistols and one Zigana pistol, along with 13 magazines and 32 live cartridges.
Heroin worth Rs 12 crore confiscated, suspected to be smuggled from Pakistan.
A car and motorcycle used for trafficking were also seized during the operation.
The module was allegedly controlled by a Bishnoi gang member based abroad.
Police suspect cross-border smuggling routes were used for the consignment.
Weapons are estimated to be worth Rs 15 lakh each in the black market.
The case is being investigated for links tointernational drug and arms trafficking.

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


United News of India
29 minutes ago
- United News of India
HP court orders attachment of govt property in over 27-yr-old land compensation case
Shimla, June 12 (UNI) Highlighting prolonged government inaction, the district judge (forest) Ajay Mehta has directed the attachment of key government properties, including the PWD rest house at Tara Devi, two official vehicles from the PWD headquarters, furniture, computers, and heaters, over non-payment of land compensation to farmers for the past 27 years. The case pertains to land acquired in 1998 by the Public Works Department (PWD) Rohru division for the construction of the Baidhar-Thana-Tikkar road. Approximately 15 bighas were acquired, including apple orchards, and the land acquisition officer had initially assessed compensation at Rs. 6,252 per apple plant. Unsatisfied with the award, landowners from Tikka -- Diwan Chand, Bhajan Das, Inder Singh, Narain Chand, Bahadur Singh, Nihal Chand, Jagdish, Mohan Chand, Jai Krishan, and Rameshwar -- moved court in 2012. In 2017, the additional district and sessions judge ordered an enhanced compensation of Rs 26,575 per plant. However, the state failed to implement the order or deposit Rs 2.5 crore compensation, prompting the petitioners to file an execution petition in 2020. The court noted that despite three prior orders to attach government property, no action was taken to disburse the compensation. It further observed that both the secretary (PWD secretariat) and the Land Acquisition Officer (Winter Field, Shimla) failed to cooperate with court proceedings. While the state government has now sought an additional four months to deposit the dues, the next hearing has been scheduled for June 18. The court has made it clear that the attachment orders will remain in force until then. In a related matter, a single bench of Justice Ajay Mohan Goel of the Himachal Pradesh High Court recently ordered the attachment of Himachal Bhavan and 18 properties of HPTDC over unpaid arbitration awards and pending dues of retired employees, reflecting a broader trend of judicial strictness over financial defaults by the state. UNI ML PRS


Time of India
43 minutes ago
- Time of India
Builder liable to register villa owners' association: Telangana RERA
HYDERABAD : The Telangana Real Estate Regulatory Authority ( TG-RERA ) has directed Prime Infratech , promoter of Prime Alpenia villa project in Mokila , to facilitate registration of a formal association of allottees within 45 days. The directive, issued on June 4, followed a complaint by a villa owner alleging continued harassment and illegal fund collection in the absence of a registered society. In his complaint, Budi Venkata Ramana, who resides in LB Nagar, said that he had purchased a villa in the project in Dec 2021 and despite paying Rs 3,41,000 for corpus and maintenance charges in Feb 2022, the promised registered villa owners' association was never formed. The villa remained unoccupied until April 2024 and was let out from May 1, 2024. In June and July 2023, he paid maintenance to one of the respondents based on an oral assurance that the society would soon be registered. However, he refused to continue payments to the unregistered group and notified the respondents in March 2024 through a legal notice that he would only pay a legally recognised society. Despite this, he claimed he was coerced into paying Rs 76,725 and that both he and his tenant faced threats, including possible utility disconnection. The authority ruled that the promoter failed to discharge the statutory duty under Section 11(4)(e) of the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016, which mandates enabling the formation of an association or society of allottees. This failure, it observed, directly impairs the rights of buyers and falls well within its regulatory scope. The claim by the promoter that a group of residents voluntarily managing the premises absolves it of responsibility was rejected. The duty to initiate and facilitate a registered association was termed a binding legal obligation, not a discretionary act. Respondents managing the unregistered group argued that they were collecting maintenance to ensure the upkeep of common areas, citing collective decision-making by residents. However, the authority clarified that disputes between residents or unregistered groups do not fall under its jurisdiction. It noted that Ramana had already approached the Telangana Co-operative Department in Oct 2024, which is the competent forum to address such internal matters. TG-RERA reiterated that the obligation to form a registered association and to hand over common areas was not optional. Any continued failure in this regard would invite regulatory consequences under Section 63 of the RE(R&D) Act. Simultaneously, it also held that the complainant was legally required to pay maintenance charges under Section 19(6), regardless of whether the villa was occupied, since the obligation was based on possession and not on actual use.


India Gazette
an hour ago
- India Gazette
UP: Two accused in bank robbery case arrested from Mathura
Mathura (Uttar Pradesh) [India], June 12 (ANI): Two miscreants who had allegedly looted Rs 36 lakh from HDFC Bank branch in Kapurthala, Punjab nearly two weeks ago have been arrested, a senior police official said. The duo were arrested in Mathura and Rs 2.2 lakh cash was recovered from their possession. Avanish Kumar Mishra, Superintendent of Police (SP) Crime, told ANI a day earlier, 'On May 30, the miscreants had looted Rs 36 lakh. We had received information about their presence near Mathura. SOG, Govindnagar police team and Punjab Police team arrested two miscreants (Navjot Singh and Zorawar Singh)'. SP Mishra added, 'Rs 2.2 lakh cash, 5 mobiles and Innova car were recovered from the possession of the miscreants...' Meanwhile, in Delhi on June 4, a criminal wanted in robbery and murder cases was arrested by the team of Police Station Nand Nagri following a brief exchange of fire. According to the police, a pistol and two fired cartridges were recovered from the accused during the operation. The incident took place on May 4, when a police team comprising Constables Mukesh, Paramjeet, and Jitender was patrolling the area of District Park, A-Block Nand Nagri. At about 10:30 PM, the team received information regarding the presence of a wanted criminal near the northern side of District Park, opposite the main Wazirabad Road flyover. Upon reaching the spot, the team noticed a suspicious person and asked him to stop for a check. However, sensing danger, the suspect opened fire at the police team. Despite the threat, the team showed restraint and warned him to surrender, but the suspect fired again. In self-defence, Constable Paramjeet fired twice from his service pistol, one of which struck the suspect in the right leg. The accused stumbled and was immediately overpowered and disarmed by the police team. (ANI)