Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

The fall, rise & fall of kidney racket kingpin Dr Kumar

- Neha Pant neha.pant@htlive.com n

ORIGINALLY FROM MAHARASHTR­A, KUMAR HAD SHOT TO NATIONAL LIMELIGHT WITH THE GURGAON KIDNEY RACKET CASE IN 2008

DEHRADUN: He did everything possible to evade arrest — used aliases, continuall­y changed places of work across states and burnt all incriminat­ing documents — but law finally got the better of Dr Amit Kumar, who allegedly mastermind­ed the kidney racket that was being run in Dehradun — and years earlier, in Gurugram.

Amit and his brother Jeevan Kumar, also a doctor, were arrested by Dehradun police from Panchkula in Haryana late on Friday. He was preparing to escape to Nepal. The police confiscate­d six mobile phones and ₹33 lakh from his car. His son, also a doctor, is still absconding.

Kumar was arrested many times, jumped bail and went absconding in several cases over the past two decades, but always began his ‘business’ of illegal kidney extraction­s afresh each time, thanks to his strong network of touts and middlemen who lined up kidney donors and recipients from different parts of the country and even abroad.

Police said he had been booked in many cases in Mumbai, Guntur and Anand apart from those registered by the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) and the enforcemen­t directorat­e.

Originally from Maharashtr­a and known by several aliases including Dr Amit Kumar, Dr Santosh Raut and Dr Amit Raut, the kidney racket kingpin had shot to national limelight with the Gurgaon kidney racket case in 2008.

He fled to Nepal, but was later extradited by CBI.

In 2013, a CBI special court had convicted Amit to seven years of rigorous imprisonme­nt besides slapping a fine of ₹60 lakh on him. He got bail a year later, but continued kidney extraction­s in Gurugram, even while he was on bail, through his agent Javed Khan from Mumbai (who was arrested by the Dehradun police on Sep 11).

He was again arrested in connection with another kidney racket case in Gujarat in March last year, wherein he escaped police custody while being escorted to Anand from New Delhi in August 2016. He was later declared an absconder and a reward of ₹50,000 was announced against him by the Gujarat police.

In the past, too, a Faridabad court had in 2012 sentenced him to 10 years of rigorous imprisonme­nt, convicting him for negligence in treatment that led to death of three Turkish nationals. He had also been arrested by the Delhi police in 2000 in another kidney racket in Delhi.

Shockingly, Dr Amit, who confessed to police to have performed around 50 renal surgeries in Dehradun in the past two months, is an ayurvedic practition­er and not even qualified to perform a kidney extraction/transplant­ation surgery.

“He continuall­y used to change names and was found carrying two separate driving licenses even when he was arrested. All the money he used to earn through his illegal activities used to get exhausted every time he got arrested, so he used to start all over again, changing his place of action,” Dehradun senior superinten­dent of police (SSP) Nivedita Kukreti Kumar said.

After fleeing from Gujarat, he got in touch with one Rajiv Chaudhary, the middleman who brokered the deal for a hospital premises in Uttarakhan­d for Dr Amit.

In Dehradun, his modus operandi was to get poor people from far off states for extracting kidneys and later transplant­ed them on rich patients, including foreigners at a makeshift operation theater at building at a desolate location on Dehradun-Haridwar highway.

Police said he had an arrangemen­t with a private hospital around 30 km from Dehradun, where the post operative care of the patients were taken. He started his racket in July this year.

“They used to burn all documents related to the case to eliminate any evidence...he told us that around 50 kidney surgeries (including organ extraction and transplant­ation) had been performed in the Dehradun hospital since July this year,” the SSP said.

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