Shivaji Bodkhe, Joint Commissioner of Police, Nagpur (ANI Twitter ) 
Nation

Nagpur police says CBI judge Loya died of heart attack

Earlier in the day, the Maharashtra government handed over documents in a sealed cover in connection with Loya’s death to the Supreme Court.

From our online archive

NAGPUR: The Nagpur police said on Tuesday that the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) judge Justice B.H. Loya had died due to a heart attack.

Nagpur Joint Commissioner of Police Shivaji Bodkhe said the police had undertaken a thorough investigation into the case and reached the conclusion after receiving the postmortem and forensic reports.

“Nagpur police undertook a thorough investigation. B.H. Loya’s death was due to a heart attack; postmortem and forensic reports confirmed the same,” Bodkhe told media.

Earlier in the day, the Maharashtra government handed over documents in a sealed cover in connection with Loya’s death to the Supreme Court.

A division bench of the apex court, headed by Justice Arun Mishra, was hearing the plea filed by three petitioners, Aneeta Shenoy, Shehzad Poonawalla and a journalist.

All the three petitioners have sought a Special Investigation Team (SIT) probe into the alleged mysterious death of the judge.

The petitioners have claimed that Loya died mysteriously in 2014 when he was hearing the Sohrabuddin Sheikh fake encounter case, in which Bharatiya Janata Party President Amit Shah was a prime accused.

Asserting that the "matter was very serious”, the top court had, earlier, asked the Maharashtra government to submit the postmortem report of the deceased CBI judge.

Trump says US will be out of Iran 'pretty quickly' as Tehran rubbishes claims of seeking ceasefire

West Asia conflict: PM reviews supply chains, price stability, diversification for LPG and LNG in CCS meeting

Amazon's cloud computing facility in Bahrain hit in Iranian strike, reports Financial Times

IndiGo revises fuel charges by up to Rs 950 for domestic flights after jet fuel price hike

Amid Opposition protests and Kerala poll concerns, Centre drops debate on new FCRA bill

SCROLL FOR NEXT