India-s Biggest Scandal Mysore Mallige [SAFE]
“At 11:30 PM,” he told the police, “Neeraj complained of a severe headache. She had a history of migraines. I, as a doctor, administered an injection of —a mild sedative and anti-emetic. She fell asleep peacefully. I went to the hall to watch television. At 2:00 AM, I returned to find her... unresponsive.”
For seven years, the case meandered. Judges were transferred. Witnesses turned hostile. Servants who saw Sujatha pacing outside the bedroom at 1:00 AM suddenly “forgot.”
In 2005, the High Court looked at the same evidence and saw the opposite. “The conduct of the accused,” the bench noted, “is inconsistent with that of a grieving husband. He did not raise an alarm. He did not call a neighbor. He called the police directly and confessed. Then, he retracted. The chemical analysis is unassailable.” INDIA-S BIGGEST SCANDAL Mysore Mallige
The report that came back three weeks later was a nuclear bomb.
The High Court convicted Dr. Sujatha Kumar. He was sentenced to . “At 11:30 PM,” he told the police, “Neeraj
Prologue: The City of Palaces Turns Pale Mysore, the city of sandalwood, silk, and the illuminated Vrindavan Gardens, was asleep under a dewy December sky in 1992. On the posh, tree-lined road of Gokulam, inside the quiet bungalow of Dr. Sujatha Kumar, the air was about to turn venomous.
The Supreme Court, in a final, scathing 2016 judgment, upheld the conviction. “The circumstantial evidence is complete. The motive is clear. The doctor abused his knowledge to become a death angel. The ‘Mysore Mallige’ case shall serve as the precedent for medical murder in India.” Dr. Sujatha Kumar sits in Bangalore Central Prison today, still maintaining his innocence, still writing letters to medical journals about judicial bias. She fell asleep peacefully
In the end, the scandal wasn’t about a single murder. It was about a system that almost let a genius get away with the perfect crime. Almost.