Wife gave poison to husband after he asked for headache medicine, he died, know the case

Bhilwara : How dangerous can mismatched relationships be for society? This bitter truth has come to light in the investigation of the Madanlal Gadri murder case that took place in Dhumdans village of Sadar police station area of ​​Bhilwara. Educated wife Vandana did not like her less educated husband Madan. One day when the husband asked for medicine for headache, the wife poisoned him. After the postmortem revealed that the death was due to poison, the police was considering it a suicide but the family members put pressure on them saying that their son could not have committed suicide, so the police changed the angle of investigation after which the whole truth came out.

The case is from Dhumdas village of Bhilwara. Where 22-year-old Madan’s health suddenly deteriorated on June 3, and he was first admitted to Mahatma Gandhi Hospital in Bhilwara and later to Maharana Bhupal Hospital in Udaipur. After which Madan died in Udaipur hospital on June 6. The deceased’s brother Narayan filed a report in Sadar police station on June 15 with the court’s application, in which it was told that the deceased’s wife Tina, daughter of Kailash Gadri, had fed poison pills to Madan. Before this incident on June 3, Tina had come to her in-laws’ house from her parental home on June 1.

Wife confesses to murder
When the police registered a case of murder and started investigating the case, the case took a new turn on Wednesday night. Till now the police was investigating the case as a suicide but it turned out to be a case of murder. In the police investigation, it became clear that the wife did not like the husband, due to which the wife killed him. After confessing to the murder, the Sadar police station arrested the accused Vandana Gadri.

The husband was less educated than the wife
When the police questioned Vandana alias Tina, a shocking revelation came to light. Tina told the police that she did not like her husband Madan and wanted to marry someone else. The reason for not liking her husband was that he was less educated and worked as a laborer in a factory while Vandana was studying BA.

Asked for medicine, gave poison
During interrogation of Vandana alias Tina, it was revealed that on the day of the incident, June 3, Madan’s hands and legs were aching. Due to this, he asked his wife Vandana for a painkiller. Tina considered this as an opportunity to get Madan out of the way and gave him a sulphos pill instead of a tablet. Trusting his wife, Madan ate the sulphos pill thinking it to be a tablet and after some time his health deteriorated.

The marriage was conducted according to the Anta-Santa tradition

Due to gender imbalance, there is a tradition of Aata-Sata marriage in many rural areas of Mewar. Police say that Tina and Madan were married under the Aata-Santa tradition. Madan’s sister was married to Vandana’s brother.

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