Bengaluru: Karnataka and Maharashtra police are focusing on the possibility of right-wing groups being behind the murder, as was the case allegedly in Govind Pansare and Narendra Dabholkar murders and suspected in M.M. Kalburgi murder.
The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) probing the murder of Kalburgi and on the lookout for a man named Rudra Patil, suspected to be one of the assailants of the Kannada scholar, has joined forces with the Special Investigating Team (SIT) looking into the Gauri murder case.
Patil, who is believed to be a member of a right-wing group, is an accused in the 2009 Goa blast case and has been at large since then. There is a renewed effort to track Patil, and his capture could throw more light on the Gauri murder case as well, sources said.
Sleuths are also monitoring several members of a Goa-based right-wing group, allegedly involved in the murder of the two rationalists in Maharashtra, and are looking closely at their movements before and after Gauri’s murder. There is, however, no breakthrough yet, sources said.
The weapon used to kill Gauri holds the answer to solving the murder case, sleuths said.
A team is still combing areas in the tri-junction of Karnataka, Maharashtra and Goa, notorious for illegal running of country-made pistols.
The Karnataka SIT is expected to move trial courts in Maharashtra to seek the custody of the cartridges found at the scenes of Dabholkar and Pansare murder. It has sought the cartridges found at the scene of Kalburgi murder. These cartridges would be compared with those found at the spot where Gauri was killed.