Free Press Journal

Lankesh case: SIT releases suspect sketches

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Bengaluru : The Special Investigation Team (SIT) probing the killing of Gauri Lankesh on Saturday released the sketches of suspects, along with footage obtained from CCTV cameras installed near the slain journalist’s house. Lankesh was gunned down by unidentified assailants in front of her residence here on September 5. The 21-member SIT released the sketches, prepared on the basis of information collected from witnesses, and the CCTV footage more than five weeks after she was killed. “There are only two suspects, but we have released three sketches, based on the accounts of two witnesses…We have released two sketches of one of the suspects because they were drawn by two professional painters,” SIT chief B K Singh told reporters here. Stating that his team had questioned around 200-250 people in connection with its probe, Singh said the assailants had used a 7.65 mm country-made pistol to gun down the veteran journalist. “We have also ruled out any professional rivalry behind Lankesh’s killing. In other words, no journalist was involved in it. But, all other angles (including Naxal and personal) are being probed,” he added.

Singh said the SIT was probing the case with “a free mind”. He added that the suspects, aged between 25 and 35 years, had stayed in Bengaluru for a minimum of seven days before committing the crime and carried out a reconnaissance of the journalist’s house. “We are trying to find out from the public where had they stayed. Once we find out who they were, whether they were known to the locals, everything will come out,” he added.

Replying to a query, the SIT chief said the investigators had collected certain clues from the video footage obtained from the house of Lankesh. “In fact, we began our investigation by collecting evidence from her house on the day of the crime,” he added. Singh said the SIT could not say with a “100 per cent surety” whether the pattern behind the killings of rationalists Narendra Dabholkar and Govind Pansare in Maharashtra, progressive Kannada writer M M Kalburgi in Dharwad, Karnataka and Lankesh was similar. “There are some dissimilarities between the Gauri (Lankesh), Pansare, Dabholkar and Kalburgi cases, but there is an equal number of similarities also. So, we cannot say with a 100-per cent surety (whether there is a pattern behind these killings),” he said.


The SIT chief also refuted reports that they had sought assistance from Scotland Yard in solving the case. “We will definitely seek assistance from international agencies if we require. In this case, we have not sought any such help,” he said. The footage released by the SIT shows a man riding a motorcycle without a registration number, apparently to conceal his identity.