Kolkata Rape and Murder Case: Protests are being held across the country over the rape and murder case of a trainee doctor at Kolkata’s RG Kar Medical College. The CBI had conducted a psychoanalysis of the accused Sanjay Roy in this case, which has revealed some shocking things. It has come to light that the accused Sanjay has a sexually perverted mentality and has animalistic tendencies. CBI experts have also scanned Roy’s statements and tried to link them with the postmortem and forensic findings.
According to the Times of India report, CBI officials have said that Sanjay Roy’s presence at the crime scene has been confirmed by technical and scientific evidence. Before the CBI took over the case, Kolkata Police had said that the blood found under the rape victim’s nails and the marks on her skin matched the injuries on Sanjay Roy’s hands. The CBI will submit the status report of the investigation done so far in this case to the Supreme Court by Thursday.
CBI sources say that CCTV footage recovered from RG Kar shows that Sanjay Roy was present near the chest department around 11 am on August 8. At that time the victim was in the ward with four other junior doctors. Roy was then seen staring at her before leaving. During interrogation, accused Sanjay Roy said that he had come to the ward the evening before. On August 9, the victim went to have dinner with other junior doctors and then returned to the seminar hall at 1 am. Around 2.30 am, a junior doctor entered the hall and the victim spoke to him before going to sleep. Later, Roy was again captured in the CCTV footage at 4 am and investigators believe that he then went straight to the seminar hall, where the victim was sleeping.
The hearing of the Kolkata case continued in the Supreme Court today as well
The Kolkata case was also heard in the Supreme Court on Thursday. During this, the Supreme Court termed the delay of Kolkata Police in registering a case of unnatural death in connection with the rape and murder of a female doctor at RG Kar Medical College and Hospital as extremely disturbing. The court asked the doctors protesting against the incident to return to work and assured them that no adverse action would be taken against them after returning to work. The bench of CJI DY Chandrachud, Justice JB Pardiwala and Justice Manoj Mishra questioned the sequence and timing of the legal formalities done by the police and said that it is very surprising that the post-mortem of the deceased victim was done between 6:10 pm and 7:10 pm on August 9, even before registering a case of unnatural death.