UP: Bloated body of Kanpur professor found floating in Ganga, sent for post-mortem Kanpur News – Times of India

Kanpur: Nine days after his family was wiped out with cold blood, the body of a professor found floating at Siddhanth Ghat on the doomsday of Kanpur Ganges In Chakeri area of ​​Kanpur. The body has been sent for post-mortem and police claims Prof. Sushil Kumar A few hours after the triple murder, he must have jumped into the Ganges to end his life.
Sleeping pills, identity cards and car keys were recovered from his bloated body. Sources told TOI, a forensic team has been kept on standby to analyze his viscera as his body was highly decomposed and vital organs were damaged.
When the body was found floating in the Ganges on Sunday, a steamer was pressed into service and brought it to shore. DCP (West) BBGTS Murthy supervised the operation along with the Water Police. On November 3, the professor strangled his wife, Chandraprabha, at Divinity Homes apartment in Kalyanpur, and used a hammer to sniff the lives of their son, Shikhar, 21, and daughter Khushi, 16. He had very meticulously planned the murder and made his family members drink spurious liquor.
After the professor went missing, he was caught in the CCTV cameras installed at Atal Ghat and later the location of his mobile was found from Sarsaiah Ghat in Ganga. A massive search operation was launched and divers were pressed into service along the banks of the Ganges from Kanpur. Fatehpur, until he was found swimming near the banks of the Ganges at Chakeri nine days later.
On November 3, he had messaged his brother immediately after committing the murder. While a WhatsApp message to his brother was said to have wiped out his family in severe depression, a 10-page suicide note lying among the blood-soaked bodies of his wife and children showed signs of doom fast approaching as Covid. The day was talked about. omicron, “There is no more counting body now. I am deliberately destroying myself by killing my family. No one else is responsible,” wrote 55-year-old Professor Sushil Singh, who was the head of the forensic science department at a private medical college in Mandhana.

,