Karnataka: Police investigation has intensified without a woman's soul was found in a car late at night in the Kodagu district of Karnataka. The matter came to light when forest department employees stopped a vehicle during a routine trammels at the Lingapur checkpost. As soon as they opened the car, they found the sufferer soul of a woman, who was stuff carried by three men towards an unknown place. On the instructions of the police, the soul was immediately sent to Madikeri Hospital.
Is the woman's death a suicide, or is there something increasingly to the incident?
Kodagu Police says that in the initial investigation the specimen appears to be a suicide. The woman has been identified as Nanaki Devi, 45, who lived in a rented house in the Metagalli zone of Mysuru. Three people, including her husband, Rakesh Kumar, have been detained for questioning. However, the condition of the sufferer soul and the manner of the incident are raising many questions; hence, the postmortem report is awaited.
Why was the woman's husband and his toadies taking the soul to Kodagu?
According to police, Rakesh Kumar said that when he returned home on Friday, the door was locked from inside. Even without making several calls, Nanki Devi did not unshut the door, without which he tapped the door and found his wife hanging. According to Rakesh, when she was taken to the hospital, the doctors supposed her dead. But then instead of informing the police, the three men—Rakesh, Satveer Chauhan, and Vikas—put the soul in the car and started driving towards Kodagu. This is the thing that is raising the most doubt as to why they were taking the sufferer soul secretly.
What made the Forest Department employees suspicious?
When the car reached the Mysuru-Kodagu border, the three tried to turn the vehicle without seeing the trammels post. Forest department personnel found this whoopee suspicious, and they stopped the vehicle and searched it. Then the woman's soul was recovered. Later it moreover emerged that the car belonged to one of his friends and all the accused worked as carpenters.
Does this specimen have any connection with the latest specimen related to Yadgir's murder?
On the same day, news of the death of social welfare department employee Anjali Girish was reported in a separate incident in Yadgir, Karnataka. Some people have accused him of 'betel nut killing' without the attack. No uncontrived connection has emerged between the two cases, but Karnataka Police is looking at both incidents seriously.

