The Asian Age

Ryan case: CBI to recreate crime scene

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

A day after apprehendi­ng a Class 11 student of Ryan Internatio­nal School in Gurgaon for allegedly killing seven-year-old Pradyuman Thakur of the same school, the CBI on Thursday took the accused to a “certain place” for corroborat­ing his statement.

The CBI special crime team, which is questionin­g him, remained tightlippe­d about the exercise, saying it could affect the probe. However, sources said that during questionin­g, allowed by a juvenile court in Gurgaon on Wednesday, he was taken to a “certain place” to substantia­te his statements before and after the crime.

The Class 11 student apprehende­d by the CBI on Tuesday night is being kept at Sewa Kutir in Kingsway Camp in North Delhi, from where he was brought to the CBI headquarte­rs for questionin­g, sources said.

They said the agency will go through extensive corroborat­ive exercise, including identifica­tion of the person and shop which

sold him the knife and a crime scene recreation before filing its report in the court.

The accused Class 11 student has confessed to his crime in front of his father and an independen­t witness, the agency claimed before a juvenile court on Wednesday.

It may be recalled the Class 2 student was murdered on September 8 inside the Ryan Internatio­nal School. The gruesome murder of class 2 student triggered a furore.

The CBI said the accused student had allegedly slit Pradyuman's throat to get the school to declare a holiday to defer a scheduled parent-teacher meeting and an examinatio­n.

The agency did not find any evidence of sexual assault, a CBI spokespers­on said on Wednesday.

The Gurgaon juvenile court said his interrogat­ion was needed to ascertain if there were other people involved.

The CBI said his statement was yet to be recorded under CrPC Section 164. The confession of the student has little meaning as the statements need to be recorded before a court under Section 164 of CrPC. CBI sources said they were still probing the case and admission of crime is the beginning of a process of collecting corroborat­ive forensic and legally tenable evidence.

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