Chequebook cover5/22/2023 Poonawalla Fincorp's Professional Loan for Doctors.Plan your vacation with the new CRED Escapes.UBT leader Desai's son joins Shinde-led Sena.Shinde's Rs 300 per quintal ex gratia fails to satisfy onion farmers.Maha live: 17 lakh govt employees launch strike for OPS.Asia's first woman loco pilot now runs Vande Bharat Express on Mumbai-Pune-Solapur section.Over 1,000 flights in just 24 hours: Can Mumbai airport beat 2018 record?.Surprisingly, neither at Patna nor at Delhi nor at Mumbai, the accused raised any grievance that he being assaulted," the judge said, who also relied on call detail records that showed the accused was near the location of the crime. "It was tried to be lamely argued this was as a result of beating by the police at Patna. The judge said the accused was found with nail and other injury marks. A doctor who was called declared Minoti dead. The woman said when she visited the house at 5.15pm along with the driver and opened the door with the duplicate keys, she found her mother-in-law lying face down with her hands and legs tied in the store room near the kitchen. The minor told the driver Minoti was in the bathroom, the woman said. The woman said at 12.30pm when the driver once again attempted to hand over the cheque book, the minor opened only the inside door, keeping the safety door latched. She said when the driver had enquired with the security guard, he was told that neither Minoti nor the minor were seen leaving the house. The driver also told her at 11.30am that day he too visited the house to hand over a cheque book given to him by Minoti's husband but no one answered the doorbell. The woman said on the day of the crime, the family driver called her up in the evening telling her that the cook couldn't go to the house as nobody opened the door. She told the court that a cook used to visit her in-laws' house twice a day and another help used to work there once a day. The daughter-in-law was among the 19 witnesses cited by chief public prosecutor J V Desai to seek the conviction of the accused. Pending trial, the ornaments and the cash amount seized was returned to Minoti's family. The judge said the recovery of incriminating articles from the accused "nailed the coffin of the offence in favour of the accused". Police recovered jewellery from the adult accused who had escaped to Patna after the murder. Minoti was found with her hands and legs tied in the storeroom of the house by her daughter-in-law, Hemal Parikh, who lived in a separate house close by with her husband, Nihar Parikh, the victim's son. She was strangulated and also left with 18 injuries. Minoti, wife of a pharmaceutical company owner, Ajay Parikh, lived in the duplex with him and their daughter. The judge said the prosecution had established that the brothers, in connivance with each other, committed the robbery as well as the murder of the victim, Minoti Parikh, on February 23, 2015. In fact, it is murder of the hands that fed the family of the child in conflict with law.," said principal judge A Subramaniam. "Having considered the facts of this case, it is a cold-blooded, planned murder of a lady for monetary gains.
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