This Article is From Jan 21, 2011

Aarushi case: Will Talwars get full closure report?

Aarushi case: Will Talwars get full closure report?
New Delhi: The Aarushi case is being heard at a special court in Ghaziabad today. The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) today claimed that there was enough material for the court to take cognisance of its closure report. Appearing for the CBI, counsel R K Saini said nothing beyond the closure report, which has already been given to Rajesh Talwar, should be provided.

Aarushi's father, Rajesh Talwar, is arguing against the CBI's closure report. The family claims they have still not received the annexures of the closure report that the court had ordered the CBI to pass on last time.

The Talwars have moved an application demanding the same again.  They seek the copy of the report which lists why the CBI wants to end the investigation into the murder of their 14-year-old daughter, and their domestic help, Hemraj. A court over-ruled the CBI which said that because Aarushi's father, Rajesh, is an accused in the case, he is not entitled to a copy of its closure report.

Nupur and Rajesh Talwar are opposing the CBI's decision to drop the double-murder investigation. The CBI told a Ghaziabad court late last month that it does not have any evidence - and cannot establish a motive - but believes that Aarushi was killed in her Noida bedroom by her father in May 2008. Nupur and Rajesh have expressed anguish and anger over what they - and many legal experts - describe as character assassination.

Aarushi was found with her throat slit on the morning of May 16, 2008. She had been killed while her parents were sleeping in the room next door in their Noida apartment. Initially, Rajesh Talwar told the Noida police that his domestic help, Hemraj, who lived with them was missing, and that it was likely that he had killed Aarushi. The next day, Hemraj's body was discovered on the terrace of the Talwar home.

Rajesh was arrested a week later, and spent three months in jail before the CBI admitted in court that it had no evidence against him. The CBI then arrested three domestic helpers who worked and lived near the Talwars. A few months later, they were released from jail after the CBI said no evidence had been found against them either.

The CBI in its closure report field in December turned the heat on Rajesh once again, listing him as its only suspect. The agency said that one of Rajesh's golf clubs that may have served as the murder weapon had been scrubbed clean, and that the Talwars took a year to hand it over to the CBI. Nupur has countered this, stating that it was Rajesh and she who volunteered information about the club, and offered it to the CBI for inspection.

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