Bhopal: In a shocking incident, an ex-corporator from the BJP and his wife and their two children – who were suffering from muscular dystrophy – died by suicide in Vidisha district of Madhya Pradesh on Thursday evening, said the police.
The deceased were identified as Sanjeev Mishra (45), his wife Neelam (42), and their sons Anmol (13) and Sarthak (7), added the police.
According to the police, the couple was stressed due to the children’s medical condition.
Mishra posted to social media. Taking to Twitter, he said, “May God spare even enemy’s children from this disease… I am not able to save the children, I do not want to live anymore,” Mishra had posted on social media before taking the extreme step.
A case has been registered at the Civil Lines Police Station of Vidisha.
The police reached the spot and broke open the room’s locked door and rushed the four family members to the hospital where all four died during treatment.
SRINAGAR: A woman was killed when she was hit with a bullet fired accidentally by her husband from a rifle belonging to a VDC member in Surankote area of Poonch on Thursday. Whether it is a case of accidental killing or otherwise is being investigated, police said.
Quoting a police officer news agency GNS reported that an information was received through reliable sources that a 30-year-old woman identified as Rubina Kouser was killed due to bullet wounds at around 1:30 p.m. Immediately, he said, a police team rushed to the spot and arrested her husband Nassar Ahmad son of Nazir Hussain of Upper Murrah in Surankote. He said that a case has been registered and the weapon, a rifle of the VDC member, has been seized.
A police official said that preliminary investigations have revealed that the fire was fired by Nassar Ahmad and further investigations are underway if the fire went off accidentally or by design.
Budgam, Jan 25: A concrete structure raised by wife of Ali Mohammad Sagar, National Conference General Secretary, at Humhuma in this central Kashmir district, has been demolished during the ongoing anti-encroachment drive in Jammu and Kashmir, official sources said.
They told GNS that a team of revenue department alongside law enforcement agencies reached the site at Airport road Humhama this afternoon and razed it to ground.
The structure, they said, was raised on the state land occupied by the Sagar’s wife adjacent to her house which is on the proprietary land. “Apparently the concrete structure was being used as a guard room for the security personnel,” they added.
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Budgam, Jan 25 (GNS): A concrete structure raised by wife of Ali Mohammad Sagar, National Conference General Secretary, at Humhuma in this central Kashmir district, has been demolished during the ongoing anti-encroachment drive in Jammu and Kashmir, official sources said.
They told GNS that a team of revenue department alongside law enforcement agencies reached the site at Airport road Humhama this afternoon and razed it to ground. The structure, they said, was raised on the state land occupied by the Sagar’s wife adjacent to her house which is on the proprietary land. “Apparently the concrete structure was being used as a guard room for the security personnel,” they added. (GNS)
Budgam, Jan 25: A concrete structure raised by wife of Ali Mohammad Sagar, National Conference General Secretary, at Humhuma in this central Kashmir district, has been demolished during the ongoing anti-encroachment drive in Jammu and Kashmir, official sources said.
They told GNS that a team of revenue department alongside law enforcement agencies reached the site at Airport road Humhama this afternoon and razed it to ground. The structure, they said, was raised on the state land occupied by the Sagar’s wife adjacent to her house which is on the proprietary land. “Apparently the concrete structure was being used as a guard room for the security personnel,” they added. (GNS)
Kolkata: A Kolkata court on Monday ordered Indian pacer Mohammed Shami to pay a monthly alimony of Rs 1.30 lakh to his estranged wife Hasin Jahan.
Out of the Rs 1.30 lakh, Rs 50,000 will be the personal alimony to Hasin Jahan and the remaining Rs 80,000 will be the cost of maintenance of their daughter who is staying with her.
In 2018, Hasin Jahan filed a legal case seeking a monthly alimony of Rs 10 lakh, with Rs 7,00,000 for personal expenses and Rs 3,00,000 for the maintenance of their daughter.
Her counsel Mriganka Mistry informed the court that as per the income tax returns of the Indian pacer for the financial year 2020-2021, his annual income for that fiscal was over Rs 7 crore, and on the basis of that, the demand for a monthly alimony of Rs 10 lakhs was not unjustified.
However, Selim Rahman, the counsel for Shami, claimed that since Hasin Jahan herself was having a steady income source by working as a professional fashion model, the demand for that high alimony amount was not justified.
Finally, after hearing both sides, the lower court, on Monday, fixed the monthly alimony amount at Rs 1.30 lakh. Although expressing gratitude over the court’s directive, Hasin Jahan claimed that she would have been relieved had the monthly alimony amount been higher. There was no reaction from the Indian pacer on this count till the report was filed.
On September last year after the victory of the Indian team against Pakistan at Asia Cup, Hasin Jahan shared in social media a photo of Hardik Pandya, who led India to victory with a six and there she took a veiled attack against Shami, who was not in the Indian squad.
“Congratulations. A memorable victory. Thanks to our Tigers for helping the country win. This had to happen; the country’s reputation and honour are protected by honest patriots rather than criminals and womanisers,” her post then had read. The post sparked widespread outrage among fans and many criticised Hasin Jahan for her veiled attack on Shami.
Our house contains a secret mystery room I didn’t even know was there until almost a year after we moved in. One day I was sitting alone in the garden looking up at the little round window near the peak of the back roof, when it occurred to me that I had never seen the view out of that window.
I went into the house and up the stairs, only to discover that the window didn’t exist from the inside. I made the trip to the garden and back a few times, the final time leading my wife outside by the wrist.
“What room does that window look out from?” I said, pointing up.
“Huh,” she said. “I’ve never noticed that window.”
After a while it became clear – sort of – that the window belonged to a little loft above the oldest one’s bedroom, although there was no access to it: the ceiling of the bedroom below is completely plastered over.
Sometimes I reflect on what might be up there – some gold bars perhaps, or a colony of protected bats. But I mostly don’t think about it because it gives me the creeps. The mystery of the secret room hadn’t crossed my mind in at least a year, until my wife started making plans.
“I’m going to have a big cupboard here,” she says, spreading her arms along a section of kitchen wall.
“There’s already a cupboard there,” I say. “Aren’t we looking right at it?”
“That’s freestanding,” she says. “I want built-in, and all the way along.”
“Won’t it block the door?” I say.
“Halfway then,” she says.
“Won’t that look weird?” I say.
“I knew you’d be like this,” she says.
“I’m just worried it will make the space seem smaller,” I say.
“We have no storage!” she shouts. “No place to put anything! What do you suggest?”
“I suggest we throw away half our stuff,” I say.
“Or we could just throw away all your stuff,” she says.
“If it prevents this cupboard, I will consider it,” I say.
A lot of my wife’s improvement proposals are predicated on the fond hope that our children will finally leave home in 2023. This is why the sudden need for extra kitchen storage perplexes me.
“Seriously,” I say. “When they’re gone we’ll only need, like, a frying pan and two forks. We can share a mug.”
“You understand nothing,” she says.
My wife’s plans also include moving us into the oldest one’s former bedroom, which was instantly colonised by the middle one when the oldest one moved out, and will probably be commandeered by the youngest one eventually.
“But if they both go this year, we should probably be in there,” my wife says. “It’s the biggest room.”
“It could be even bigger,” I say. “Don’t forget about the mystery room above it.”
“I hadn’t thought of that,” my wife says. Little lights go on behind her eyes, and I realise I have inadvertently rekindled her lust for additional storage space once more.
I am sitting in my office shed when I suddenly notice something: our neighbour’s rear extension has an identical round window in the same spot.
Two days later my wife returns from next door with a load of pictures on her phone, of a dimly lit space filled with junk.
“She’s got folding stairs going up there, and you can just about stand up in the middle,” she says.
“Does it have a floor?” I say. My wife stops scrolling through the photos to stare at me.
“Of course it has a fucking floor,” she says.
“I mean, did she have to put a floor in, or was there already one?”
“Oh,” my wife says. “I didn’t ask.”
“Because we don’t really know what we’ll find until we get up there,” I say, thinking about the possibilities: a mummified cat; a skeleton in an Edwardian wedding dress.
“She said the folding stairs were expensive, but you shouldn’t skimp.”
The next day I find myself browsing through high-end folding loft ladders, wondering how much we’re going to end up spending, or how many evil spirits we’re going to unleash, in order to have somewhere to keep our Christmas lights.
Then I think: this is all your fault, because you saw that little round window, and you couldn’t leave well enough alone.
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( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )
A Massachusetts man accused of killing and dismembering his missing wife, Ana Walshe, 39, allegedly Googled “10 ways to dispose of a dead body if you really need to,” according to prosecutors.
Brian Walshe, 47, of Cohasset, appeared in court Wednesday morning on charges of murder and improper transport of a body. Not guilty pleas to the charges were entered on his behalf. Walshe was already in custody after pleading not guilty to a charge of misleading investigators.
Brian Walshe stands during his arraignment in Quincy District Court, in Quincy, Mass., Monday, Jan. 9, 2023, to face charges in connection with misleading investigators. Walshe has been charged with the murder of his wife, missing Cohasset woman Ana Walshe.
Greg Derr/AP
Prosecutors believe Walshe made a series of Google searches including: “how long before a body starts to smell”; “how to stop a body from decomposing”; “how to embalm a body”; and “what’s the best state to divorce.”
Walshe also allegedly Googled “dismemberment” and “what happens when you put body parts in ammonia,” prosecutor Lynn Beland said. There were more Google searches for “hacksaw best tool to dismember” and “can you be charged with murder without a body,” according to Beland.
Brian Walshe, of Cohasset, faces a Quincy Court judge charged with impeding the investigation into his wife Ana’ disappearance from their home, on Jan. 9, 2023.
Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger via AP, Pool
Blood, a bloody knife and another knife were found in the basement of the Walshes’ Cohasset home, Beland said.
Prosecutors said police also recovered 10 trash bags containing blood-stained items including: a hacksaw, towels, rags, cleaning agents, carpets, slippers, Prada purse and Ana Walshe’s COVID-19 vaccine card. Investigators found DNA from Ana Walshe and Brian Walshe on the slippers, according to Beland.
In this image posted to her Facebook account, Ana Walshe is shown.
Ana Walshe/FaceBook
Ana Walshe was reported missing by co-workers in Washington on Jan. 4. At that time, Brian Walshe claimed he last saw his wife early on Jan. 1, as she prepared to take a ride share to Boston Logan International Airport for a “work emergency,” but investigators said she never caught a ride and never boarded a plane.
Investigators said they tracked Ana’s phone on Jan. 2, and it pinged in or near her Cohasset home.
Brian Walshe was charged with misleading the investigation on Jan. 8. At that time, investigators revealed they found blood and a broken knife in the family’s basement and had surveillance video of Brian Walshe, wearing a medical mask and surgical gloves, purchasing $450 in cleaning supplies with cash at a Home Depot in nearby Rockland.
Brian Walshe is pictured in this undated Registry of Motor Vehicles photo contained in court papers filed by federal prosecutors in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., on May 9, 2018.
U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts/Handout via REUTERS
Walshe was wearing a monitoring bracelet as he awaited sentencing for selling fake Andy Warhol paintings to an art buyer in California. He was under house arrest but was allowed to leave home for things like doctors’ appointments and grocery shopping. The bracelet did not have GPS tracking.
Police conducted a sweeping search at a Peabody landfill. The landfill was the destination for a dumpster that was outside Brian Walshe’s mother’s apartment building in Swampscott. He had visited his mom in the days following his wife’s disappearance, claiming he went shopping for her. Police found no receipts from the stores he mentioned.
Investigators have not recovered a body.
Brian and Ana Walshe have three children. Norfolk District Attorney Michael Morrissey said Ana Walshe’s disappearance was the second case of domestic violence his office had seen in recent weeks.
“Our thoughts are very much with the families these crimes have left behind,” Morrissey said.
Brian Walshe is being held without bail and is set to return to court on Feb. 9.
ABC News’ Teddy Grant and Meredith Deliso contributed to this report.
(This news/post has been generated from abcnews.go.com and its was posted in their US category. CT is not responsible for the above information.)
(We don’t allow anyone to copy content. For Copyright or Use of Content related questions,
A Massachusetts man accused of killing and dismembering his missing wife, Ana Walshe, 39, allegedly Googled “10 ways to dispose of a dead body if you really need to,” according to prosecutors.
Brian Walshe, 47, of Cohasset, appeared in court Wednesday morning on charges of murder and improper transport of a body. Not guilty pleas to the charges were entered on his behalf. Walshe was already in custody after pleading not guilty to a charge of misleading investigators.
Brian Walshe stands during his arraignment in Quincy District Court, in Quincy, Mass., Monday, Jan. 9, 2023, to face charges in connection with misleading investigators. Walshe has been charged with the murder of his wife, missing Cohasset woman Ana Walshe.
Greg Derr/AP
Prosecutors believe Walshe made a series of Google searches including: “how long before a body starts to smell”; “how to stop a body from decomposing”; “how to embalm a body”; and “what’s the best state to divorce.”
Walshe also allegedly Googled “dismemberment” and “what happens when you put body parts in ammonia,” prosecutor Lynn Beland said. There were more Google searches for “hacksaw best tool to dismember” and “can you be charged with murder without a body,” according to Beland.
Brian Walshe, of Cohasset, faces a Quincy Court judge charged with impeding the investigation into his wife Ana’ disappearance from their home, on Jan. 9, 2023.
Coffee House Death Investigation (P…
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Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger via AP, Pool
Blood, a bloody knife and another knife were found in the basement of the Walshes’ Cohasset home, Beland said.
Prosecutors said police also recovered 10 trash bags containing blood-stained items including: a hacksaw, towels, rags, cleaning agents, carpets, slippers, Prada purse and Ana Walshe’s COVID-19 vaccine card. Investigators found DNA from Ana Walshe and Brian Walshe on the slippers, according to Beland.
In this image posted to her Facebook account, Ana Walshe is shown.
Ana Walshe/FaceBook
Ana Walshe was reported missing by co-workers in Washington on Jan. 4. At that time, Brian Walshe claimed he last saw his wife early on Jan. 1, as she prepared to take a ride share to Boston Logan International Airport for a “work emergency,” but investigators said she never caught a ride and never boarded a plane.
Investigators said they tracked Ana’s phone on Jan. 2, and it pinged in or near her Cohasset home.
Brian Walshe was charged with misleading the investigation on Jan. 8. At that time, investigators revealed they found blood and a broken knife in the family’s basement and had surveillance video of Brian Walshe, wearing a medical mask and surgical gloves, purchasing $450 in cleaning supplies with cash at a Home Depot in nearby Rockland.
Brian Walshe is pictured in this undated Registry of Motor Vehicles photo contained in court papers filed by federal prosecutors in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., on May 9, 2018.
U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts/Handout via REUTERS
Walshe was wearing a monitoring bracelet as he awaited sentencing for selling fake Andy Warhol paintings to an art buyer in California. He was under house arrest but was allowed to leave home for things like doctors’ appointments and grocery shopping. The bracelet did not have GPS tracking.
Police conducted a sweeping search at a Peabody landfill. The landfill was the destination for a dumpster that was outside Brian Walshe’s mother’s apartment building in Swampscott. He had visited his mom in the days following his wife’s disappearance, claiming he went shopping for her. Police found no receipts from the stores he mentioned.
Investigators have not recovered a body.
Brian and Ana Walshe have three children. Norfolk District Attorney Michael Morrissey said Ana Walshe’s disappearance was the second case of domestic violence his office had seen in recent weeks.
“Our thoughts are very much with the families these crimes have left behind,” Morrissey said.
Brian Walshe is being held without bail and is set to return to court on Feb. 9.
ABC News’ Teddy Grant and Meredith Deliso contributed to this report.
(This news/post has been generated from abcnews.go.com and its was posted in their US category. CT is not responsible for the above information.)
(We don’t allow anyone to copy content. For Copyright or Use of Content related questions,
A man on Tuesday brutally murdered down his younger brother and his wife due to a “land dispute” in the village of Marheen in the Kathua district of Jammu and Kashmir.
Ramesh Kotwal, senior superintendent of police in Kathua, said that accused Raj Kumar, a resident of Chak Wazir Labzoo, killed his younger brother Naresh Kumar, 32, and his wife Asha, 24, at their home in the tehsil Marheen.
“Land disputed is stated to the cause of brutal crime,” said the top cop.
He added, “When the police party got there, they found the accused had done two murders.”
“The accused has been detained and the weapon of offence (sharp weapons) has also been seized,” the SSP said, “and the FSL team collected the samples and all legal requirements are fulfilled.”
A board of doctors has taken possession of the bodies and transported them to the Government Medical College in Kathua for postmortem examination.
At Rajbagh Police Station, a case has been filed under the relevant laws, and an investigation has started.
(With inputs from Excelsior)
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