Chhattisgarh serial killer 'poisons' 8 men, then goes to their funeral
Police said Jaiswal masked his crimes by helping victims' relatives and attending funeral ceremonies.
PTI
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The alleged psycho killer targeted victims over minor disputes fueled by revenge and personal resentment (AI)
Balodabazar, 23 June
A gruesome serial murder spree orchestrated by a "psycho killer" gripped a village in Chhattisgarh's Balodabazar district, where a shopkeeper allegedly used lethal doses of borax powder to poison eight men over a period of four months, police said on Tuesday.
The
46-year-old accused, Ram Sahay Jaiswal, evaded suspicion for months by helping
grieving families and even attending the funerals of his victims, police said.
He was
arrested on Tuesday following two weeks of investigation and over a month after
he killed his last victim.
The
chilling murders took place between February and May this year in Kharve
village under Kasdol police station limits, officials said.
According
to police, Jaiswal, said to be a "psycho killer", carried out the
murders driven by feelings of revenge, mental frustration and long-standing
grudges against the victims over minor disputes.
While the
deaths had initially been treated as natural or due to some illness, villagers
and relatives of the deceased approached police earlier this month, expressing
suspicion about Jaiswal's possible involvement, they said.
Given the
seriousness of the allegations, police launched a detailed probe, exhuming the
body of Jaiswal's last victim, Mahetaru Sahu, who died on 14 May, on 13 June,
Balodabazar-Bhatapara Superintendent of Police (in-charge) OP Sharma said.
He said
that subsequently, six more bodies were exhumed and sent to Dr Bhim Rao
Ambedkar Memorial Hospital (Mekahara) in Raipur for post-mortem examinations,
while the remains of one Budhram Jaiswal could not be recovered as he had been
cremated.
A special
medico-legal team conducted the autopsies and preserved DNA samples, viscera
and other forensic evidence for laboratory analysis, Sharma said.
Police
formed multiple teams to investigate the deaths, questioning villagers and
monitoring developments on the ground, gathering technical and forensic
evidence, he said.
Investigations
revealed that the accused had taken 'suhaga' (borax powder) from a villager,
claiming that he had needed to kill rats, he said.
During
questioning, Jaiswal initially denied any role, but eventually confessed that
he targeted the victims one after another over old disputes, verbal
altercations, allegations of witchcraft and other personal grievances, the
senior official said.
Jaiswal
first tested the poisonous substance on a dog, and after the animal died, he
allegedly carried out his first killing on 6 February, when he served liquor
laced with borax powder to Badri, a man with whom he frequently quarrelled,
police said in a statement.
Encouraged
by the first crime, the accused allegedly targeted Buthalu on 20 February over
a previous dispute linked to community issues and an assembly election-related
dispute, it said.
On March
12, Jaiswal allegedly poisoned Chhattu Ram, whom he suspected of having
improper intentions towards his wife, and within days, he targeted another
villager, Budhram, on 20 March due to a land-related dispute and rivalry.
Vinod
Kumar allegedly became the next victim on 31 March after repeated verbal
altercations with the accused, and Jaiswal similarly killed Gajanand with
poisoned liquor on 28 April, suspecting him of practising black magic against
him and causing him financial troubles, police stated in a release.
According
to investigators, Jaiswal had borrowed Rs 50,000 from another victim,
Chaituram, and allegedly killed him on 29 April to avoid repaying interest on
the loan, and murdered his last victim, Mahetaru Ram, on 14 May.
Police,
however, said that not all of Jaiswal's targets died; one of his victims,
Kartik, survived after consuming poisoned liquor. His family admitted him to the hospital after he fell ill, and he later recovered.
The
accused helped families to take victims to hospitals and even attended their
funerals to avoid suspicion, it said.
For
months, villagers attributed the deaths to illness, bad luck or coincidence.
Suspicion grew only after residents realised that all eight deceased men had
reportedly met Jaiswal shortly before their deaths.
Kartik,
the survivor, also allegedly told police that Jaiswal had given him poisoned
liquor, it said.
Based on
the findings so far, police have registered eight cases of murder and one case
of attempted murder against the accused.
The forensic reports are still awaited, and further investigation is underway, police said.
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