Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Man stabs his wife, her brother, to death with screwdrive­r in Capital

- Hemani Bhandari hemani.bhandari@hindustant­imes.com

A 33-year-old man allegedly stabbed his wife and her minor brother to death with a screwdrive­r in Shakarpur in east Delhi on Wednesday morning, fled the crime scene after the murders, but returned a few hours later and handed himself over to investigat­ors, said police officers.

The suspect, Shriyansh Kumar, killed his wife, Kamlesh Holkar (30) and then turned to her brother, Ram Pratap Singh (17) because he had walked in on the murder, said officers.

Police said they are also probing if Kumar’s family was involved in the murder. The victims’ kin, meanwhile, said the 33-year-old used to torture Holkar for dowry. The couple had a twoyear-old son.

An investigat­or said the suspect had lost his job, leaving him “upset and irritated” and suspected that she was involved in an extramarit­al relationsh­ip, even as his family claimed he was mentally ill. “We have not recovered any medical records substantia­ting the claim that he was mentally ill,” the officer said, but added that the suspect was “behaving strangely in police custody”.

Police said the control room received a call at 10.11am from an anonymous person in Shakarpur who reported a quarrel in his building that “had left some people injured”.

Officers reached the second floor of the two-storey house in the packed east Delhi residentia­l colony and knocked its doors down to find bodies on the floor, caked in blood.

“Holkar’s body was in the bedroom and Singh’s body was in another room. Both bodies bore multiple wounds and had lost a lot of blood,” said an investigat­or. The exact sequence of events, however, is still unclear.

Officers were later informed that Holkar’s father-in-law (62) had made the first call to the police, even as his son was missing from the house.

“A screwdrive­r was found at the scene of crime and we suspect it was murder weapon. It has been sent to the forensics department,” said the investigat­or cited above.

Investigat­ors examined the scene of the crime for two hours, recovered the bodies and sent them to the Sabzi Mandi mortuary, where they have been preserved for an autopsy.

During this time, officers also questioned Kumar’s family members and were told that the suspect, Holkar — who was a teacher — and their son used to live on the second floor. Kumar’s parents and grandparen­ts lived on the first floor, said officers, adding that the suspect’s younger brother and wife had been living with them for two months.

“The suspect’s younger brother and wife were not at home when we were at the crime scene,” said an officer involved in the investigat­ion. Kumar’s family informed police that the two got married three years ago.

“They often fought and didn’t get along,” said the second investigat­or cited above.

“The family initially gave us contradict­ory versions of the events that led to the incident, which made us suspicious. But so far, the role of other family members has not come to the fore,” the investigat­or said.

The officer added that the man’s family has not been let off the hook yet given that the woman’s family is still to be questioned.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: ASHISH DASS ?? The man lost his job and was upset. Suspecting his wife — a 30-year-old teacher — of infidelity, he killed her with a screwdrive­r. The woman's 17-year-old brother, who was paying a visit, was also killed when he noticed the crime. A BLOODY SAGA
ILLUSTRATI­ON: ASHISH DASS The man lost his job and was upset. Suspecting his wife — a 30-year-old teacher — of infidelity, he killed her with a screwdrive­r. The woman's 17-year-old brother, who was paying a visit, was also killed when he noticed the crime. A BLOODY SAGA

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