In 2008, police had claimed that one Satyam Babu, had confessed to the murder.
Twelve years after the rape and murder of B-Pharma student at a hostel in Vijayawada, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has dug out her body for fresh autopsy.
A team of forensic experts from Delhi were conducting the autopsy at the graveyard in Tenali town of Guntur district of Andhra Pradesh.
The body was dug out under the supervision of CBI official leading the probe into the sensational case, which saw many twists and turns.
The federal agency, which began the investigations last year on the direction of the High Court, hopes to gather some clues in the horrific crime, which had shocked Andhra Pradesh.
Blood-stained body of the 19-year-old was found with multiple stab injuries in the bathroom of a private ladies hostel in Ibrahimpatnam near Vijayawada on the night of December 27, 2007.
The woman's family had alleged that the evidence was wiped out from the scene of the offence to shield the guilty. It claimed that a relative of the former minister and his friends were involved in the crime but innocents were arrested and sentenced.
In 2008, police had claimed that one Satyam Babu, arrested in a cell phone robbery case, confessed to the murder.
The Mahila Court in Vijayawada, on September 10, 2010, convicted and sentenced Satyam Babu to life imprisonment.
In 2017, the Hyderabad High Court acquitted Satyam Babu, a Dalit youth. It also ordered action against the police officials who investigated the case.
Subsequently, the state government constituted Special Investigation Team (SIT) to conduct a fresh probe. The High Court was supervising the probe by SIT, which found that all records relating to the case were destroyed by the trial court.
Expressing its unhappiness over the manner in which SIT conducted the probe, the court in November 2018 handed over the case to CBI
The agency was also directed to probe the destruction of records relating to the case. The CBI booked a case against some employees of the trial court.
Meanwhile, the woman's mother has appealed to Chief Minister YS Jagan Mohan Reddy to ensure that it becomes the first case to be tried under Andhra Pradesh Disha Act.
The State Assembly on Friday passed a Bill, providing for death penalty to rapists. It also fixed 21 days as the period to complete the investigation and trial.
The woman's mother told reporters on Saturday that over the last 12 years, they had lost confidence in police and the entire system due to the manner in which the case was handled by them. "Justice is delivered in selected cases. It is only for the rich and powerful while victims from ordinary and poor families like us are made to run from pillar to post," she said.
Disha Act is named after the victim of Hyderabad case while Nirbhaya Act was passed after the gang-rape and murder of a girl in Delhi in 2012.