Mangaluru, Aug 1: After the death of Cafe Coffee Day founder V G Siddhartha, the letter he purportedly wrote — in which he blamed his financial troubles and “harassment” on the Income Tax Department for “succumbing to the situation” — has gained legal significance. It will now have to be treated as a dying declaration or suicide note, after checking the veracity of the letter, say legal experts and senior police officials of the State.
“We have recovered the letter from his family members. We will take necessary action further,” said Kamal Pant, Additional Director-General of Police (Law and Order), Karnataka. However, a senior police official overseeing the case said that given the circumstances of his death and how the letter has surfaced, it could be considered a dying declaration.
Sources said a clerk in Siddhartha’s office handed over the letter to his immediate family hours after he went missing near Mangaluru on Monday night. The clerk has told the family and the police that Siddhartha had dictated the letter to her a few weeks ago and he called her on Monday evening, hours before he went missing, asking her to release it to over 200 people, including CCD employees, investors and media on Tuesday morning. The police will record the clerk’s statement and would then corroborate it with Siddhartha’s call records.
“Even if the letter was written a few weeks ago, his call to the clerk asking her to release it as his statement the next day clearly indicates it was his dying declaration,” said senior criminal lawyer C.H. Hanumantharaya. This, despite the letter not explicitly saying he was taking his life, as the tone of the letter and the circumstances indicated the same.
A senior police official said that if the police probe into his death led to the inference that these factors unfairly pushed him to take the extreme step, then booking a case for abetment would be considered.
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