No injuries to private parts of Delhi woman who was dragged by car, says autopsy report

0
261


New Delhi:

In what may rule out sexual assault, an autopsy has found “no injuries to the private parts” of the Delhi woman who was dragged for several kilometres by a car in the early hours of January 1.

Victim Anjali Singh’s mother was among those who suspected that it may not just be a case of the car hitting her scooter and then dragging her for 13 km, causing her death.

The report of the autopsy — done by a board of doctors at Maulana Azad Medical College — will be submitted to the police at 2 pm, sources said. 

For further tests, swab samples and shreds of her jeans have been preserved. 

The five men who were in the car have been arrested and charged with ‘culpable homicide not amounting to murder’, rash driving and causing death by negligence. Police had already said they found no evidence of sexual assault.

However, investigators have found a key witness — 20-year-old Anjali, who worked as an event manager, was with a friend, Nidhi, when the Maruti Baleno car hit her scooter. The friend, uninjured, fled the scene but Anjali’s leg got stuck in the car’s axle, sources told NDTV. Nidhi is now a crucial eyewitness, police said.

38eqbnoo

Angered by the horrific incident, people protested outside the Sultanpuri police station on Monday.

Details of the accident emerged when cops re-charted the route the victim had taken after leaving a hotel at 1.45 am on January 1 after attending a New Year’s party. CCTV footage showed two women leaving the hotel on a scooter, not very far from the spot of the accident in Sultanpuri area. 

The men in the car have allegedly admitted that they were drunk. In panic after hitting the scooter, they sped away, unaware that a woman was being dragged along. 

It was after the car had covered 13 km, dragging the woman through the streets, that one of the men noticed an arm sticking out at a U-turn at Kanjhawala. They stopped, her body fell off, and they drove away.

Cops said Deepak Khanna, the one driving, said he did feel “something stuck” under the car, but others told him it was nothing.

The case unraveled after police responded to calls from people who saw the body being dragged. One of those who alerted the cops had tried to alert the car-borne men, too, and followed them on a scooter, but he could not keep up.



Source link