Porsche After the crash, the boy’s mother’s blood samples were allegedly switched for the boy’s, according to accusations made against his parents and two physicians at Sassoon General Hospital.
Two months after two IT professionals were murdered in a Porsche car accident in Pune, police in Pune have filed a chargesheet against seven individuals, including the minor’s parents who were reportedly driving the vehicle.
Shalesh Balkawade, Additional Commissioner of Police (Crime), was reported by PTI as stating, “We have filed a 900-page chargesheet against seven accused, including the parents of the minor, two doctors and a staffer from Sassoon General Hospital and two middlemen in a Pune court on Thursday.”
In the early hours of May 19, a luxury automobile driven by a 17-year-old child who was reportedly under the influence of alcohol attacked and killed two software engineers who were riding motorbikes in Kalyani Nagar, Pune.
The boy’s parents, staff member Atul Ghatkamble, and two physicians from Sassoon General Hospital, Ajay Taware and Dr. Shrihari Halnor, are accused of exchanging the boy’s blood samples with his mother’s following the collision.
In order to effectuate the exchange, Ashpak Makandar and Amar Gaikwad are accused of overseeing the money transactions between the father and the physicians.
There are fifty witness testimonies on the charge sheet. All of the evidence against the 17-year-old teenager in the vehicle collision case was included in the final report that the police gave to the Juvenile Justice Board last month.
The Juvenile Justice Board (JJB) first granted the boy, who is the son of real estate magnate Vishal Agarwal, bail with the requirement that he submit a 300-word essay.
This choice caused a great deal of popular indignation. The youngster was remanded to an observation home by the JJB after the police asked for a review.
Previous CCTV footage that the police obtained showed the adolescent drinking at a pub before to the collision. The video has been verified by Police Commissioner Amitesh Kumar, who stated that the youngster understood exactly what he was doing.
Aneesh Awadhiya and Ashwini Koshta, two IT specialists, were thrown into the air and landed on parked cars. While the other one passed away while receiving treatment, the first one died instantly. From Madhya Pradesh, they were both.
Following a habeas corpus appeal submitted by his paternal aunt, the kid was freed from the observation home in June. According to PTI, the Bombay High Court ruled that the remand orders that sent him to the institution were unlawful. Along with that, he sent in a 300-word essay about road safety in compliance with the bail requirements of the Juvenile Justice Board (JJB).