Mumbai: The incident of a man brutally killing his live-in partner in Geeta Nagar area of Mira Road near Mumbai has shaken the entire nation. The statement of the accused of Meera Road murder case has come and he has made a big claim. Manoj, accused of killing( ‘killer’) the live-in partner and boiling her body into countless pieces after boiling it in a pressure cooker, told the police during interrogation that he was HIV positive and had never had physical relations with the deceased.
Accused Manoj Sane further told the police that Saraswati was like his daughter to Vaidya. A senior police officer said that the accused Manoj Ramesh Sane, 56, who was arrested on Thursday, claimed that 32-year-old Saraswati Vaidya had committed suicide on June 3. Fearing that he would be booked, he allegedly tried to dispose of the body. He further told the police that after this he planned to end his life.
Police could not count the pieces of dead body
The official who visited the spot on Wednesday night after the death came to light said that Sane’s claims are being verified during interrogation. Police said that after cutting the body into small pieces with an electric tree cutter, Sane allegedly boiled some of its parts in a pressure cooker and fried them on gas for easy disposal. One officer said that he allegedly placed the pieces in buckets, tubs, cookers and other utensils in the kitchen and reduced them to such a small size that the police could not even count them.
The police have registered a case under IPC sections 302 (murder) and 201 (destroying evidence). Jayant Bajbale, DCP of Mira-Bhayander Vasai Virar police, said, “He was produced before a court in Thane and remanded to police custody till June 16.” The senior officer said, “During preliminary questioning, Sane told the police that In 2008, he came to know that he was HIV positive. Since then, he is on medication.
The accused told this story
The officer said that according to Manoj Sane’s confession before the police, Saraswati was very possessive by nature and used to doubt him. During interrogation, the officer quoted Sane’s admission that she was planning to appear for the SSC class 10 exam and Sane had told her to study maths. The officer said that they found a board on one of the walls of the seventh-floor flat, on which mathematical equations were written.