Indian
Express: Noida: Sunday, October 06, 2019
A
PCO call, a t-shirt with a “Honda logo” and a tattoo were some of the few
things that helped nail RTI activist Chandra Mohan Sharma (43), who had faked
his own death in 2014 to live with his girlfriend, Preeti Nagar (30).
Last
week, Sharma was sentenced to life imprisonment by a Gautam Budh Nagar district
court while Preeti faces prison for up to six months. The lawyer representing
Sharma plans to challenge the sentence.
The
case dates back to May 2, 2014, when a call was received about a car found
burning near Greater Noida’s Jaypee Greens. As the fire was brought under
control, a body charred beyond recognition was found in the back seat. A tiny
piece of cloth with the ‘Honda’ logo was recovered as a possible clue to the
accused’s identity.
Soon
after, an FIR was filed by Savita, wife of Chandra Mohan Sharma, that her
husband, an RTI activist, had been killed over an alleged land dispute. Sharma,
who worked with Honda at the time, had filed several RTIs over alleged illegal
land occupation for a temple in Kasna, as per statements submitted in court.
Police began looking for the accused named in the FIR filed by his wife.
A
month later, Preeti’s family filed an FIR under IPC section 364 (kidnapping) at
a Greater Noida police station, stating that she had been allegedly abducted.
Three months on, no leads were found in either case, and the trail seemed to go
cold.
Then,
on August 9 this year, Preeti’s father Santram received an anonymous phone call
claiming his daughter was in Tirupati.
“We
travelled with Preeti’s father and another relative to Tirupati, but found that
the number belonged to a PCO in Bengaluru. We located the phone booth to
Hoskote; next to it was a jewellery shop with a CCTV. The PCO and shop owner
recalled that the caller was wearing a ‘Honda uniform’,” Vinay Sharma, a Kasna
police officer investigating the case, told the court. The caller had stood out
since most callers at the PCO didn’t talk in Hindi.
Police
found that the caller worked at Honda Motorcycle India Pvt Ltd and his name was
Nitin Sharma. When police traced him, they noticed a tattoo on his hand which
read ‘Chandramohan and Savita’.
This
was the point police realised Nitin was, in fact, Chandra Mohan Sharma. Sharma then
allegedly offered a bribe to the police officer and asked him to not reveal his
true identity.
On
further investigation, police found that Sharma had been having an affair with
Preeti. The two had secretly married in an Arya Samaj Mandir and wanted “a new
start”. On the day of the incident, Sharma and his brother-in-law strangled a
homeless, mentally challenged man near Ansal Plaza and placed him in the car,
which was set on fire. Soon after, Sharma fled to Bengaluru and assumed a new
identity. He got fake documents and even got a job in Honda, the same company
he had been working at earlier, police said.
But
financial problems arose when Sharma and Preeti began living with each other in
Bengaluru, which prompted him to make calls to her father about her location,
hoping he would take her away.
His
counsel, however, alleged that the case needs to be looked at again. “We are
looking to challenge the case on technical grounds,” said Yogesh Solanki,
Sharma’s lawyer.