Neeraj bawana biography of donald
NIA raids Jind residence linked to Neeraj Bawana gang member
Local police in Jind were unaware of the raid. Upon learning about it, they arrived at Rambeer Colony but were prevented from intervening by the NIA and its security personnel. The case prompting the raid has not yet been disclosed.
Dinesh has been incarcerated in Delhi’s Tihar Jail for the past eight years on serious charges, including murder and violations of the Arms Act. However, no cases are registered against him in Jind. During the raid, only his mother, Bala Devi, and his brother were at home, both of whom were asleep. The NIA team knocked on the door, which was opened by Dinesh’s brother. The officials identified themselves and explained they were there to question the family about Dinesh.
Dinesh’s brother said that the NIA team arrived in two vehicles, conducted inquiries, and left without seizing anything. He added that the family had disowned Dinesh years ago and had no contact with him since. "Our father has passed away, and one of my brothers runs a grocery store in Jind," he said.
Dinesh is considered a close associate of Neeraj Bawana, who began his criminal career in 2004 with his first murder at the age of 18. Bawana has since earned notoriety as the “Extortion King” for demanding ransoms from prominent businessmen in Delhi-NCR and has been involved in illegal land grabs. Over 100 cases, including murder, attempted murder, and extortion, are registered against him.
Reports suggest that Neeraj Bawana’s name is linked to underworld don Dawood Ibrahim’s D-Company, with Dinesh being considered a
Delhi HC refuses bail to gangster Neeraj Bawana, says right to speedy trial not a ‘free pass’ for undertrials
The court arrived at the conclusion while answering the legal question of whether the period of custody undergone itself entitles an undertrial to be released on regular bail premised on the right to speedy trial arising from Article 21 of the Constitution of India.
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Justice Anup Jairam Bhambhani took into account that Bawana “has committed heinous offenceswhile he was on bail in other cases; and he has been convicted in the offences committed while on bail”.
“When there is a long list of serious criminal involvements, including convictions for offences committed while on bail in other cases, the apprehension that the petitioner suffers from recidivism cannot be dismissed as imaginary. In that view of the matter, the petitioner’s submission that he has served sentence for those crimes offers scant comfort to the court that no one else will be harmed by the petitioner if he is enlarged on bail this time…,” the order stated.
“…by his past conduct the petitioner has demonstrated that even conditions imposed while granting him bail would not dissuade him from indulging in criminality…bail is not being denied so as to inflict pre-trial punishment upon the petitioner, but in view of the petitioner’s grave criminal antecedents and demonstrable recidivistic tendencies…,” the court further stated.
Also Read | How gangs and gangsters are inching closer to the heart of Delhi
Bawana was seeking bail in an August 2015 case registered at Mangolpuri police station where he and two other prisoners allegedly murdered two other inmates inside a prison van while they were being transported from Rohini court lock-up to Tihar jail by strangulating them with gamchas (towels).
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“What these circumstances betray is not just the horror of a double murder committed under the watch of armed On the evening of 6 April 2015, the Special Cell of Delhi Police received a message from a source. Neeraj Bawana—one of the most wanted men in the capital, sought on more than 40 counts of murder, land grabbing and extortion—was going to be in Kamruddin Nagar in west Delhi at around midnight, and then head to Bawana, his hometown on Delhi’s north-west border. A press release that was circulated by the Special Cell on the day of his arrest said that Bawana was going home to visit his family. A senior official from the Cell told me that that Bawana often undertook these trips, and that they were important to keep his extortion racket running. Police forces across the National Capital Region, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand—all areas where Bawana acted prominently—have been scrambling to catch him for over two years now. Even though 35 members of his gang were arrested in the past year, Bawana remained elusive. Barely educated but a quick learner, he had, according to the senior official I spoke to, picked up pointers from other criminals he had met during earlier stints in jail. He disguised himself when communicating online or over the phone, and changed vehicles often. When the police thought he was in one state, he was actually in another. More than a dozen operations to catch Bawana had failed. But on the night he was arrested, the Special Cell had concrete information. Bawana, they knew, would be in a white Hyundai Verna with a registration number that ended in 4386. Quickly, a team of specialists was formed and equipped, and rushed to Rohtak Road, a long stretch of road which Bawana would have to cross. They laid a trap, and he fell into it. At 3.45 am, the king of the Delhi underworld was put in handcuffs. Born as Neeraj Sehrawat in Bawana, in 1988, the name that Sehrawat came to be known by was an appropriation of the name of his town. An eighteen-month-long wait, an anonymous tip, a night-long vigil, a high-speed chase, whizzing bullets is what it took before the Delhi Police laid hands on one of their biggest prizes. Neeraj Sehrawat, better known as Neeraj Bawana, who ruled Delhi's underworld, terrorised businessmen and realtors with , grabbed land and was wanted in murder cases, was arrested early Tuesday, police said. An aide, Mohammad Rashid Khan, who was with him in the car was also nabbed after a brief gunfight with the personnel of the Delhi Police's special cell near Mundka on the western periphery of the city at around 3.45am. "Bawana was a ghostly figure for us as neither he nor those around him used mobile phones to avoid tracking. He used internet-based communication system and camouflaged his location," SN Shrivastava, special CP (special cell), said. Police were tipped off that the gangster was travelling from Mumbai to Delhi and would visit family in Bawana. The elusive gangster, who took his name from the agricultural-industrial belt of Bawana in western Delhi where he comes from, was also wanted in neigbouring states of Haryana, Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh ever since he jumped parole in 2013. The Delhi Police conducted 20 unsuccessful operations to nab Bawana who has 40 cases against his name. They arrested some 36 of his men, but he would always make his escape hours and even days ahead of police raids, sources said. As he played hide-and-seek with the police, he favoured cities in western India - Mumbai, Ahmedabad and Silivassa - as his hideouts but also had bases in east and central India, police said. Believed to be an opium addict, Bawana didn't use public transport. Irrespective of the distance, he would use a car or an SUV to visit Delhi. To keep police off his trail, he would not use a car for more than a week. Born in 1989 to a Delhi Transport Corporation conduc
From Petty Robberies to Land Extortion and Murder: How Neeraj Bawana Became One of the Most Wanted Criminals in Delhi
Delhi gangster Neeraj Bawana held after anonymous tip, high-speed chase and whizzing bullets