Not Average
3.1K posts

Not Average
@psc2009
Love my nation, Proud Rajput, Passionate Coder, Travel Enthusiast, Shutter 🐛, Share Market Investor
Faridabad Beigetreten Ağustos 2009
681 Folgt1.1K Follower
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Famous cases of India
Vidya Jain Murder Case.
Background -
Victim: Vidya Jain, wife of a prominent doctor Dr NS Jain
Main accused: Dr. NS Jain (a well-known eye specialist and honorary surgeon to President V. V. Giri) and his secretary Chandresh Sharma
Location: Defence Colony, New Delhi
Date: 4 December 1973
Timeline -
On the evening of 4 December 1973, Dr. Jain took his wife out of the house, pretending they were going to visit relatives.
As they approached their car, hired attackers ambushed them.
Vidya Jain was dragged into a drain and stabbed multiple times (around 14 injuries).
She was taken to a hospital but was declared dead.
Motive -
The investigation revealed Dr. Jain was in a relationship with his former secretary Chandresh Sharma.
Both wanted to continue their relationship openly and allegedly planned to remove Vidya.
They hired contract killers to execute the murder.
Investigation Highlights
No robbery → ruled out theft as motive
Dr. Jain was unharmed → raised suspicion
He showed unusual behavior (didn’t chase attackers)
Financial links and communication connected him to conspirators
These clues built a chain of circumstantial evidence against him.
Trial & Judgment
It was established in court that Dr Jain and Chandresh wanted to marry each other and, therefore, conspired together to kill Vidya.
Several people were charged, including hired killers and middlemen.
Court found Dr. Jain and Chandresh are guilty of criminal conspiracy and murder
Actual killers (Ujagar Singh and Kartar Singh) had a more direct role
Sentences:
Dr. Jain & Chandresh Sharma → Life imprisonment
Main hired contract killers Ujagar and Kartar → Death sentence .
Later Ujagar and Kartar’s sentence was enhanced from life imprisonment to death.
This case is treated as a landmark for its exposition on circumstantial evidence as we all still seem to rely heavily on direct eyewitness accounts and motive.

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@IndianTechGuide Expansion on one side, layoffs on the other...classic IT sector balance sheet move.
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@IndianTechGuide Coaching institutes are exploring IPO in India.
This shows the reality of the education system which is provided by the government.
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@psc2009 @SaffronChargers Yeah! Would've charged crores for that flat only to give a 2.5-3ft balcony!
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Someone had installed their AC’s outdoor unit outside the window on the balcony of their flat on the 23rd floor.
When the AC stopped working, they called a technician for service. But the technician refused, saying he wouldn’t service it because the unit was hanging outside at such a height, and that no one would risk their life for such a small amount of money.
Servicing outdoor units installed at such heights in flats is quite risky for technicians.
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@SecularSarcasm @SaffronChargers Exactly..the balcony size is giving me anxiety.
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@SaffronChargers Can't blame the flat owner too, right? 😅
How small are the balconies though!
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@GodfatherPill @DeepikaBhardwaj What happen if sasu ma die .. must be asked to maintain her brother, sister, father etc etc... never ending loop
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@DeepikaBhardwaj So now the husband is liable to also maintain his saasu maa?
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@_kumbhkaran He must be talking about some alternate economy we are not part of. 🤣🤣
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@DeepikaBhardwaj @djaykr1234 But the mother of a dead man is not entitled to receive maintenance from his widowed wife as per the same wise judiciary...
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@san_x_m Even after justice is delivered, it can never truly undo the injustice. This case stands as a stark reminder of that.
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Her name was Priyadarshini Mattoo.
She was 25 years old. A Kashmiri Pandit who had fled militancy in Srinagar with her family and rebuilt her life in Delhi. She was in the final semester of her LLB at Delhi University’s Campus Law Centre.
Her senior in college was a man named Santosh Kumar Singh. His father was JP Singh, a senior IPS officer who would go on to become Joint Commissioner of Delhi Police.
Santosh became obsessed with Priyadarshini. She rejected him. He began stalking her.
She filed FIR after FIR. The police did nothing. Her father went to the university. The university did nothing. She was eventually given a personal security officer. The stalking continued anyway.
On the morning of January 23, 1996, her security officer did not show up for duty.
Santosh knocked on the door of her uncle’s house in Vasant Kunj where she was staying. A servant saw him enter. What followed took less than an hour.
She was found under her bed. Strangled with an electric wire. Her face battered beyond recognition with a motorcycle helmet. She had 19 injuries on her body. DNA evidence linked Santosh directly to the crime. His fractured helmet visor was recovered. Witnesses placed him at the scene.
In 1999, Additional Sessions Judge GP Thareja delivered his verdict.
He said in open court I am convinced he is the man who committed the crime.
Then he acquitted him.
He said the CBI had fabricated the DNA evidence. He gave Santosh the benefit of the doubt.
The Delhi High Court later called this verdict a perverse approach that murdered justice and shocked the judicial conscience.
It took public outrage, media pressure and her aged father appearing on television for years before the High Court took up the appeal in 2006. Within 42 days, the High Court convicted Santosh and sentenced him to death.
The Supreme Court upheld the conviction in 2010 but reduced the sentence to life imprisonment.
He has since been granted multiple paroles. In 2019, he was given parole to appear for his LLM examination.
The man who raped and murdered Priyadarshini Mattoo is studying law in prison.
Her father fought for 10 years to get a conviction the judge already had in his hands in 1999.
The verdict said police were reluctant to act on her complaints because Santosh’s father was a senior officer. It said junior staff do not react to complaints against the relatives of their fraternity.
She filed FIR after FIR. Nobody moved.
Not until she was dead.
Follow for real stories India never makes headlines about.

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@gharkekalesh Acha hua nhi bola jyada kuch bhaiya..nahi to dono milkar aapko phasa dete...keep a safe distance from these Nibba nibbis.
हिन्दी

@JaipurDialogues All those years of raising, protecting, dreaming for her… suddenly standing right there... strong, independent and ready to serve.
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@theskindoctor13 Gem of an artist,once in a lifetime kind of sheer talent!
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He starts with that intense, almost stern expression while eating.
Then, on being asked, “naam kya hai unka,” his face sharpens, becoming attentive. There’s a brief flicker of confusion as he processes the question, and the moment he realizes he is being asked about Ila… that soft, almost shy smile appears.
So many emotions in seconds, all effortless, all real. Irrfan Khan was, arguably, the finest actor of our times. It’s been six years since we lost him.
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@Wikedass @theskindoctor13 He had that rare ability to make silence speak, to make the smallest moment stay with you.
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@theskindoctor13 Everytime, literally everytime when you see his shot or snipped of his films , you feel that numbness. Probably only actor in last couple of decades who's passing away is felt personal and irreplaceable.
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@koranne_p @theskindoctor13 Six years on, and it still feels like cinema lost a part of its soul.
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@theskindoctor13 Even Irfan Khan wouldn't be thinking about all this when he acted here. 😂
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@khurpenchh Not sure why, but this sounds like one of those crap dialogues from Shah Rukh Khan’s movies.
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