“They prematurely labelled her death a suicide, even before a proper post mortem examination was conducted,” parents said in their petition filed at the division bench of the Chief Justice of the Kolkata High Court on August 12.
They alleged that the hospital authorities, with the assistance of the police, made concerted efforts to suppress the true nature of the incident after the discovery of their daughter’s body.
The elevator to the third floor opens into a corridor where CCTV is installed. On examining its footage, accused Sanjay Roy was found to have entered the seminar hall at around 3.45 am, come out around 4.35 am and left the hospital premises at 4.37 am.
He was seen wearing earphones as he entered but they were not there when he came out.
Pieces of a broken earphone were reportedly found in the seminar room.
There is a door leading to the staircase at the rear end of the hall, but it did not have any CCTV. Other CCTVs do not record Roy’s entry or exit.
The autopsy report records their daughter’s death between 3 am and 5 am on August 9, but the parents received their first phone call from the assistant superintendent of the hospital, Dwaipayan Biswas, at 10.53 am that day.
First they were told that their daughter was unwell.
Twenty-two minutes later, at 11.15 am, the same individual called again to inform them she had died by suicide.
Later the Supreme Court questioned the sequence of events and the delays in registration of FIR by the Kolkata police.
—The crime was detected in the early hours of the morning, but the FIR was filed only late at night.
Worse, when her parents rushed to the hospital after being informed of their daughter’s death, they were denied access to the body which, their petition asserts, “indicate[s] a deliberate attempt to tamper with evidence”.
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Notably, the first FIR in the case was filed by the parents at the Tala police station at 11.45 pm on August 9 (2024).
The fact that the principal, Dr Sandip Ghosh, didn’t lodge a formal complaint also leaves room for suspicion.
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| Suspended cop Vineet Goyal |
The then Kolkata police commissioner Vineet Goyal, suspended now by the Suvendu govt, blasted media and defended his force, saying,
“There was no attempt to call the crime a ‘suicide’, as is being erroneously reported from certain quarters. The police never called it a suicide.”
The victim's parents in their petition said “they have come to know that there were no clothes on the lower part of their daughter’s body, and there were visible signs of severe torture.
"The condition of her body strongly suggested that she had been brutally raped and murdered ... (there were) multiple abrasions, bruises, and clear signs of a violent struggle, including bleeding from her vagina, lips, and eyes”.
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| Goyal and two other suspended police officials |
What is not known is if he was in any way related to other activities of the hospital administration.
When asked about his identity, all Kolkata police commissioner Vineet Goyal supplied was that he was a “criminal of the highest order”. (India Today)
How did Sanjay Roy, the main accused in the case, get such unfettered access to the hospital premises?
More surprisingly perhaps - he was familiar with the movements of doctors and his victim's whereabouts.
He was, after all, a mere civic police volunteer, a force that West Bengal had constituted in 2012 to assist during festivals, elections and disaster management.
Inducted in 2019, Roy lived in the barracks meant for the fourth battalion of the Kolkata armed police, something he was not entitled to.
He would visit the hospital frequently, ostensibly to admit patients on behalf of the Kolkata Police Welfare Association.
How he could have done this is another mystery since one needs to be a permanent member of the force to be inducted into the association.
A clear complexity ::: A professor of orthopaedics,
Dr Sandip Ghosh had been transferred twice in the past three years (ref 2024) but quickly reinstated; once within a couple of weeks and another time within hours.
"Even Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee is said to have thrown her weight behind him, transferring him to another prestigious state-run hospital as principal instead of accepting his resignation before the uproar forced a reversal of that decision", reported 'India Today' (Sept 2, 2024)
**** Multiple formal complaints have been lodged against Ghosh in the past few years, one in April 2024 itself.
Chief among these is that Ghosh was the mastermind of a racket that involved the unlawful collection of biomedical waste from hospital vats to sell to outsiders, and that he used (dead) bodies sent to the hospital by the police for post-mortem for an ENT workshop without the necessary permissions and consent.
A committee had, in fact, been set up by the then RGKMCH medical superintendent and vice-principal in March 2023 to inquire into the allegations of mismanagement of biomedical waste.
Its convenor was Akhtar Ali, former deputy superintendent (non-medical) of RGKMCH and later posted at the Murshidabad Medical College and Hospital.
He cited 15 counts on which Ghosh’s actions seemed suspicious in a letter to the state vigilance commission in July 2023.
Apart from the biomedical waste allegation, they included one of the hospital buying (allegedly on the order of the principal), High Flow Nasal Oxygenation machines for Rs 4.3 lakh apiece plus 12 per cent GST during the pandemic.
For context, he had pointed to how other city hospitals had bought similar machines for as low as Rs 1.35 lakh apiece.
So what made Ghosh so powerful? In a conversation with journalists, Opposition leader from the BJP, Suvendu Adhikari, (now CM) had claimed in 2024 that Ghosh was/is close to a private orthopaedician, Dr Shyama Pada Das, who is allegedly close to CM Mamata.
Das is reportedly a member of the ‘North Bengal’ lobby, which allegedly calls the shots in the state health department.
The renovation and the ransacking/tampering the spot
ends