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Sources Reveal CBI Investigation Suggests Kolkata Doctor Was Not Gang-Raped

According to the CBI’s preliminary inquiry into the death of the 31-year-old trainee doctor from Kolkata, she was not gang-raped, India Today has exclusively revealed. According to the investigation, the sole person connected to the horrific crime at the government-run RG Kar Medical College and Hospital on August 9 was Sanjoy Roy, a volunteer for the community who was taken into custody.

Sources say that the forensic report shows that Roy, a community volunteer who was associated with the Kolkata Police, killed and sexually assaulted the doctor. One person’s involvement has purportedly been established by the DNA results as well. In light of early thoughts and accusations on the possibility of gang-rape, the disclosures are crucial.

On August 10, Sanjoy Roy was taken into custody, one day after the doctor’s partially nude corpse was discovered in the hospital’s seminar hall. According to news agency, the CBI also went through CCTV footage that appeared to show Roy entering the premises where the doctor was found dead.

Roy was taken into custody when his Bluetooth headset was discovered at the scene of the incident. Roy had a history of domestic abuse and was able to access every department of the hospital.

The CBI hasn’t finished looking into whether or if more people were involved in the case, though. The forensic report will probably be sent by the agency to outside specialists for a final assessment.

A medical professional previously asserted that the victim may have been the victim of gang rape, citing the discovery of “151 mg of liquid” in the vaginal swab test. India Today was informed by Dr. Subarna Goswami that the trainee doctor’s injuries could not have been caused by a single individual.

In the Calcutta High Court, the victim’s parents also advanced similar defence, claiming that the girl had a “significant amount of semen in her body” and implying that she had been raped by a gang.

Mahua Moitra, a member of the Trinamool Congress, refuted the claims, stating that the autopsy report’s reference to 150 grammes was the weight of the inner and outer genitalia. Millilitres are the unit of measurement for fluids, she added.

“RG Kar autopsy in the presence of a judicial magistrate and 3 doctors: Show no fracture to the pelvic girdle or other bones. 150 gm refers to weight of inner and outer genitalia and not to imaginary amount of fluid. Does not suggest multiple assailants,” Moitra tweeted.

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