logo
‘Wedding bomb', professional rivalry: How English professor's ‘revenge' that killed 2 in Odisha ended in life term for him

‘Wedding bomb', professional rivalry: How English professor's ‘revenge' that killed 2 in Odisha ended in life term for him

First Post28-05-2025

An Odisha court has sentenced a former English professor to life imprisonment for sending a parcel bomb, disguised as a 'wedding gift', that killed a newly married 26-year-old software engineer and his great aunt in 2018, while severely injuring his wife. The case shocked Odisha, and for weeks, there were no leads. Then, an anonymous letter became a turning point, leading to the arrest of Punjilal Meher, who attended both the wedding and the funeral of the victim read more
A court in Odisha has sentenced a former English professor to life imprisonment for sending a parcel bomb that killed a newlywed man and his great aunt in 2018. Punjilal Meher, 56, was found guilty of murder, attempted murder, and use of explosives.
The 2018 case had shaken Odisha and the rest of India. Here we will look at the tale of 'revenge' that took the lives of two people and how the police finally cracked the 'wedding bomb' case.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
'Wedding bomb' kills two
On February 23, 2018, Soumya Sekhar Sahu, a 26-year-old software engineer, and his 22-year-old wife, Reema, were in the kitchen at their family home in Patnagarh, Odisha.
It was five days after their wedding when a deliveryman gave Soumya a parcel addressed to him.
As per BBC, a sticker on the parcel said it was sent by one SK Sharma from Raipur, Chhattisgarh.
'This looks like a wedding gift,' Soumya is reported to have told his wife. 'The only thing that I don't know is the sender. I don't know anyone in Raipur.'
As Soumya opened the parcel, there was a flash of light and a huge explosion shook the kitchen. The blast killed him and his 85-year-old great-aunt Jemamani Sahu, both of whom had suffered 90 per cent burns.
Reema survived but had serious burns and a punctured eardrum.
Odisha police cracks the case
The Odisha police solved the 'wedding bomb' case after two months.
However, weeks after the crime, there were no clear suspects. They questioned more than 100 people, mostly friends and relatives of the couple, but did not get any leads.
The investigators said it was a meticulously planned and executed crime. After the police's initial investigation, the case was later taken over by the Odisha Crime Branch.
Speaking to BBC in March 2018, Reema said that her husband, Soumya, had received a mysterious call when he was in Bengaluru.
'The call came last year. We were talking on the phone, and he said there was a call coming in. And I vaguely remember he put me on hold, and later told me, 'I got a threatening call. A man on the line told me not to marry.''
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Soumya did not mention any other such calls, and the couple went ahead with the marriage.
The police scoured phone records and even interrogated the man who had made the threatening call to Soumya, but there was still no headway.
Then, an anonymous letter by the convict in April helped the Odisha Crime Branch, led by senior IPS officer Arun Bothra, crack the case.
The tale of English professor's 'revenge'
The letter, sent to the then Bolangir Superintendent of Police, said that the bomb was sent under the name 'SK Sinha,' not Sharma. It also claimed that three people were involved in the 'project' – the explosion – and mentioned the motive as 'his (Soumya's) betrayal' that led to many people losing their lives and money.
It also asked the police to 'stop harassing innocent people'.
The letter, which allegedly tried to derail the police investigation, turned the probe.
Arun Bothra, the then-IG and Additional DG-ranked officer, noticed that the handwriting on the parcel's sticker was misread: it appeared like 'Sinha' more than 'Sharma.' This is something that only the sender of the letter could have known. The police believed now that the suspect had sent the letter himself, as per BBC.
'It was clear that the sender knew more about the crime than we did. By writing that it was being sent by a messenger, he wanted to tell us that the crime was not the work of a local man. He wanted to tell us that the plot was executed by three people. He wanted to be taken seriously, so he was kind of blowing his fake cover by pointing out a mistake we had made,' Bothra told BBC in 2018.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
As per Indian Express, the senior IPS officer said the letter was meant to'deceive' the investigation agency, but the accused had left 'many clues in the letter'.
'The language, the font size and the spacing in the letter indicated that it was sent by someone with command over English. It led us to zero in on the accused, who was an English lecturer. When we searched his house, we got some evidence, which was scientifically matched. That was the turning point in the case,' Bothra said.
Soumya's mother and college teacher, Sanjukta Sahu, recognised the writing style and phraseology in the letter, linking it to her colleague, Punjilal Meher, as reported by BBC.
The police then questioned Meher, who initially claimed that he was forced to deliver the letter under threat.
However, he later confessed. Meher, an English lecturer, planned the crime after Sanjukta replaced him as the principal of Jyoti Vikas College in Bhainsa.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
He began hoarding firecrackers during Diwali, extracted gunpowder from them and used the internet to learn how to assemble bombs.
The bomb he made was put in a cardboard box and gift-wrapped. Days before the blast, Meher went to college and came back home to collect the parcel, as per I_ndian Express._
He went to Kantabanji with the parcel and then took a train to Chhattisgarh's Raipur, around 250 km from Patnagarh town.
He did not buy a train ticket to avoid detection. In Raipur, Meher searched for courier services that operated from basements and had no CCTVs. He told the services that the parcel had 'gift articles'. Police sources told the newspaper that he gave the fake name – SK Sinha – as the sender's and a wrong address. Meher returned home on an evening train.
The bomb travelled more than 650 km by bus, exchanging multiple hands before the delivery to the victim. As per investigators, it was a crude but deadly device wrapped in jute thread, which was meant to detonate on opening the parcel, reported BBC.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The 'wedding gift' reached Patnagarh on February 20 and Soumya received it three days later.
Meher, who had also left his phone at home to create an alibi, had attended both the victim's wedding and funeral.
In August 2018, the Crime Branch's chargesheet mentioned statements of 72 witnesses. Its evidence included the letter and receipt books of the parking lot at Kantabanji railway station.
ALSO READ: Baba Siddique murder: How the killing was planned in Patiala jail and executed in Mumbai
Sahu family gets justice
Over seven years after losing her son, Sanjukta Sahu has got justice. A Sessions Court in Odisha's Bolangir district on Wednesday (May 28) convicted Meher to life imprisonment.
The lone accused in the 2018 Patnagarh parcel bomb case was sentenced after days of a marathon hearing, which included the examination of 62 witnesses, reported LiveLaw.
While the prosecution had demanded the death penalty for Meher for the 'heinous' crime, the court did not classify it as a ' rarest of the rare ' case.
The court also imposed a fine of Rs 50,000 on the convict.
Sanjukta Sahu expressed satisfaction with the court ruling. However, she pointed out that she could not get back what she lost.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
'We were hoping for capital punishment in the crime considering its rarest of the rare nature. But the court sentenced life imprisonment. We express our gratitude to the court,' Rabindra Sahu, the victim's father, reportedly said outside the court.
With inputs from agencies

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Teen charged in connection with 2024 threat to Taylor Swift's Vienna Concert
Teen charged in connection with 2024 threat to Taylor Swift's Vienna Concert

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

Teen charged in connection with 2024 threat to Taylor Swift's Vienna Concert

Taylor Swift , the billionaire singer, had the highest-grossing tour of all time, 'The Eras Tour' and made a lot of memories with the fans, singing songs from all the albums she has released since the beginning of her career. However, amongst all the heartfelt shows, Swift had to cancel shows in Vienna after they were threatened with a terrorist attack in August 2024. A teenager has been identified... According to the BBC, German authorities have charged a Syria-based teenager with helping to plot a terrorist attack at Taylor Swift's scheduled concert shows in Vienna. On June 27, 2025, Germany's Federal Public Prosecutor announced that a juvenile had been indicted on charges of supporting a foreign terrorist organisation and attempting a serious act of violence against the state. While the teenager has not been in custody yet, the German authorities state that the Syrian teenager, with the help of a 19-year-old Austrian teenager, made plans to bomb the concerts in Vienna. The identified accused had been in contact with an Austrian teen in July-August 2024. Prosecutors stated that the teenager had translated bomb-making instructions, sent the main suspect their IS oath of allegiance, and further helped to establish contact with another member of the terrorist organisation. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Cardiologists: Losing a Hanging Tummy Comes Down To This 1 Thing Health Wellness Journal Learn more Undo The main Austrian 19-year-old was previously arrested before the Eras Tour concert show on August 7, 2025. Another 18-year-old was also taken into custody after two days. About Taylor Swift's statement... Taylor Swift or her representatives have not given any statement. However, when the shows were cancelled, she thanked the authorities for warning her and expressed guilt for not conducting the concert for her eager fans. After wrapping up the European leg, she posted about the terror attack, stating, 'filled me with a new sense of fear, and a tremendous amount of guilt because so many people had planned on coming to those shows.' 'But I was also so grateful to the authorities because thanks to them, we were grieving concerts and not lives. I was heartened by the love and unity I saw in the fans who banded together,' she continued.

Norwegian tourist says he was detained for ‘JD Vance meme', US says drug use, not politics, caused ban
Norwegian tourist says he was detained for ‘JD Vance meme', US says drug use, not politics, caused ban

Indian Express

time5 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Norwegian tourist says he was detained for ‘JD Vance meme', US says drug use, not politics, caused ban

A 21-year-old tourist from Norway, Mads Mikkelsen, says he was held for five hours at Newark Airport by US Customs and Border Protection (USCBP) over a meme on his phone showing US Vice-President JD Vance with a bald head. The US authorities, however, say he was denied entry due to admitted drug use. After returning to Norway, Mikkelsen told the local paper Nordlys and the BBC that USCBP officers questioned him about drug use, terrorism, and extremism. He said they asked him to unlock his phone and threatened him with a $5,000 fine if he refused. He told the BBC: 'The agent seemed to be very antagonised by the image. He asked me why I had it saved on my phone.' Mikkelsen said he explained it was a meme and meant to be humorous, but the agent replied: 'It's very clearly a piece of dangerous extremist propaganda.' Mikkelsen also admitted to the officers that he had legally used cannabis in Germany and in the US state of New Mexico. Both places allow recreational use of the drug, but under US federal law, any drug use – even where legal – can be grounds for refusal of entry. He said he was then taken to a guarded room, where he was asked to hand over his phone, shoes, and bag. Later, the USCBP posted on X: 'Fact Check: FALSE. Mads Mikkelsen was not denied entry for any memes or political reasons, it was for his admitted drug use.' The Department of Homeland Security also denied that the meme had anything to do with the decision. BS. Claims that Mads Mikkelsen was denied entry because of a JD Vance meme are FALSE. Mikkelsen was refused entry into the U.S. for his admitted drug use. — Tricia McLaughlin (@TriciaOhio) June 24, 2025 Mikkelsen described the experience as traumatic. He said he was strip-searched, fingerprinted, had his luggage searched, and blood taken. He also claimed that his Norwegian passport was wrongly marked as 'Spanish,' and that US officials wrote incorrect information about his travel plans. According to paperwork shared by Mikkelsen, border agents also suspected he may have been trying to work in the US without permission, something he denies. 'I would not return while the current government is in power,' Mikkelsen told Nordlys. BBC reports that USCBP says fewer than 0.01 per cent of travellers have their phones or devices searched. Around one million people enter the US each day. US President Donald Trump, currently in office, has taken a strong stance on drug use and border enforcement.

Haryana IPS officer Smiti Chaudhary passes away at 48
Haryana IPS officer Smiti Chaudhary passes away at 48

Indian Express

time6 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Haryana IPS officer Smiti Chaudhary passes away at 48

A 2012-batch Haryana-cadre IPS officer, Smiti Chaudhary, passed away at the age of 48 years on Friday after battling an illness. Since September 2023, she has been posted as Superintendent of Police in Haryana's Anti Corruption Bureau in Ambala, but was on an extended leave due to her ill health. Her husband Rajesh Kumar is a Maharashtra-cadre IPS officer and currently posted as Director, Maharashtra Police Academy in Nashik. Chaudhary is the daughter of former Haryana-cadre IAS officer Jaiwanti Sheokand. Her brother, Yashendra Singh, is a serving IAS officer of 2011 batch in Haryana. A Haryana Police spokesperson said the officer breathed her last while undergoing treatment in Nashik. She is survived by her husband and two children. 'She was known for her honesty, empathy, and courage. Throughout her career, she remained unwaveringly committed to the principles of justice, transparency, and public service. She demonstrated exceptional dedication and deep commitment to her duties, excelling in several challenging assignments,' the spokesperson said. The officer got inducted into the police department as Deputy Superintendent of Police in 2004 and served across various districts on several key posts. She also served as DSP in Panchkula and was later inducted into the IPS cadre and served as Superintendent of Police (Lokayukta) and state vigilance bureau besides also heading the Dadri district as district police chief. Hisar's Member of Parliament (MP), Brijendra Singh mourned her death in a post on X, 'I'm deeply saddened by the untimely demise of a member of our paternal family, Haryana IPS officer Smiti Chaudhary. Such untimely departure of a young officer is a profound loss to the family, friends and the civil services fraternity. May her soul rest in peace,' the MP said A native of Haryana's Dumarkhan Kalan village in Jind, Smiti was born on August 15, 1976 and was supposed to retire on August 31, 2036. Haryana's Director General of Police, Shatrujeet Kapur, along with the entire Haryana Police fraternity, also expressed profound sorrow over her demise. Offering condolences, Kapur said, 'the department stands firmly with her family in this difficult time. Her passing is a monumental loss to the police family'. 'May the departed soul rest in peace. Her contributions and service will forever inspire us to remain steadfast on the path of serving the nation,' he added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store