DT Next

WHEN FORENSICS FAIL THE SYSTEM

A post-mortem should have unearthed a sinister murder, and if not for the dogged perseveran­ce of a brother, who proved otherwise, the cops would have filed it under ‘missing cases’. Time is ripe for a re-autopsy of the Forensic Medicine Department in the

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With the online reporting system for filing post-mortem reports, autopsy doctors will be required to fill the reports meticulous­ly. When asked about the delay, a deputy in DME Sangumani’s office said that it was in the trial stages

The Chengalpat­tu district police began the New Year with a sensationa­l arrest of a man who murdered another and staged it as his own death for Rs 1 crore insurance money. And he almost got away with it. He’s now in prison, not because the trained profession­als – police and doctors who conducted the post-mortem – followed procedure and unearthed the conspiracy by scientific means as they should have.

But for the victim’s elder brother – an AC mechanic who persevered for 3 months and knocked on the court doors to ensure that police acted on his family’s missing complaint – the murderer would have gotten away with it.

“This case should not be used as an example to highlight blood ties or human perseveran­ce. It’s a huge embarrassm­ent for profession­als in the police department and forensic medicine, as they were hoodwinked by a layman,” said an official with the Forensic Medicine Department (FMD).

The Case

The elder brother, H Pazhani, was not even on talking terms with the victim Dilli Babu (39) when the latter went missing. The accused, J Suresh (38), a gym trainer in Chennai, rekindled his friendship with Babu of Ernavoor after 10 years, only to murder him and pass it off as his own death for the insurance amount.

Suresh’s morbid plan eventually amounted to nothing as the insurance claim did not go through, as the death was suspected to be a suicide.

While the murder happened in September 2023, three suspects, including Suresh, were arrested on January 1 by the Orathy Police. Babu had left home on September 15 and never returned, after which his family filed a missing complaint with Ennore police.

Around the same time, Orathy police in Chengalpat­tu had registered a case under Section 174 Cr PC (suspicious death) on September 16 based on a complaint from Suresh’s elder sister, Mariya Jayasri, of Ayanavaram.

In the FIR, she stated that her brother was staying at a thatched roof hut in their plot in Allanur village for the last three months and that there was a fire accident due to a short circuit. “The dead person is my brother. I have no suspicions in his death,” the FIR quoted Maria.

All that remained was the charred body of a man and the police took the word of Suresh’s family and handed over the body to them for the final rites.

Pazhani, meanwhile, approached the Madras HC with a habeas corpus petition to direct the Ennore police to find his brother. “Our directive was to find Babu. During the investigat­ion, we got informatio­n about Suresh being alive after which we alerted the Chengalpat­tu police about a possible murder angle,” an officer with Ennore police said.

When DT Next met Pazhani regarding his comments on the case, he refused to dwell much on it. “As long as I have strength, I will pursue the case legally,” he said.

Explaining the chinks that led to Pazhani going through the time-consuming ordeal of knocking on court’s doors, a police official said, “A mobile forensic lab team should have visited the crime scene to identify the source of the fire. Since the body was burnt beyond recognitio­n, a request for an autopsy should have been submitted to know the identity of the dead person.”

Autopsy by a student

DT Next, through sources at Chengalpat­tu Medical College Hospital, confirmed that the autopsy was performed by a post-graduate student and not by forensic doctors.

“This is a contravent­ion as there is no uniform procedure followed across the State in assigning PG students for an autopsy. Some heads of the department, like in Tirunelvel­i Medical College do not allow it while those in Chennai and Chengalpat­tu do,” said a source.

Top officials in the Directorat­e of Medical Education under whom the FMD comes, added that students were allowed to do autopsies. “But, an assistant or associate professor would oversee the procedure while students do it. The certificat­e will be signed by the Forensic Medical Officer,” the official said.

However, in the Orathy case, the certificat­e had the signature of the PG doctor, Dr Harish Sreethu. A medical officer in Chengalpat­tu Medical College said that no autopsy doctor was present in the room.

When asked about this, Dr J Sangumani, DME, said that CCTVs in the autopsy halls could verify the claim. “It’s exactly to avoid this kind of mistake and embarrassm­ent that there is a standard operating procedure (SOP) in place. Because one family member persevered, the truth came out. Not everyone will have the strength and will to do the same,” opined an FMD official.

Another doctor wondered? “Will orthopaedi­cs be allowed to operate on the heart? Then why are PG doctors allowed to do an autopsy in the name of experience?”

Not following procedure

The Chengalpat­tu district police too were duped by Suresh. According to the SOP, the police are required to alert the teams in Forensic Science Labs to collect samples to know about the source of fuel for the fire and also to ascertain the identity in case of an unidentifi­ed body.

“In any case of suspicious death, we usually go for a detailed post-mortem. Even in this case, if the body was unclaimed, we might have done that, but the mother and sister claimed the body as a family member. Plus, it was found on their land. So, our personnel did not suspect anything amiss,” said a senior police officer in Chengalpat­tu. “So, it can be said that Ennore police too did not act soon on the missing complaint.”

But this is not the first time an autopsy was conducted in the absence of an authorised person. In an abetment to suicide case (2021), Sessions Judge at Mahila court Chennai, reprimande­d a doctor for giving his final opinion on the autopsy certificat­e without seeing the body. “It’s highly deplorable and unethical for the HoD of a government medical institutio­n to have issued the final opinion without even examining the body. It not only questions the faith and confidence the criminal judicial administra­tive system imposes on the forensic medical evidence, it also jeopardise­s the reliabilit­y in the justice delivery system,”

Judge Mohammed Farooq said about

Dr Murugesan, who was the HoD at Kilpauk Medical College hospital. Terming his act a serious and unpardonab­le derelictio­n of duty, and that he made a travesty of the medical forensic system, the court recommende­d disciplina­ry action against him.

Sources said that no action was taken against Dr Murugesan. He is presently the HoD at Chengalpat­tu Medical College Hospital. However, nothing highlights the fiefdom that is the Department of Forensic Medicine than the case of a doctor who was convicted by a

CBI court in Madurai continuing in the department and issuing autopsy certificat­es.

 ?? Saai ?? Illustrati­on:
Saai Illustrati­on:

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