What Is Cybercrime? Common Threats and How India Responds
Cybercrime explained with 5W context, origin, purpose, India relevance, global impact, key facts and FAQ.
Read MoreThe Kilvenmani Massacre: Forty Four Lives and the Price of a Wage Dispute
Forty four Dalit labourers burned in a hut on Christmas night 1968, and a High Court that could not believe landowners would commit murder themselves. Kilvenmani is where India's atrocity jurisprudence begins.
Read MoreThe Assassination of Lalit Narayan Mishra: A Minister Dies, Questions Remain
A bomb on a Bihar railway platform in January 1975, a minister who bled for hours, and a conviction that took thirty nine years. The L N Mishra assassination has a verdict but not an explanation.
Read MoreThe Nagarwala Case: The Sixty Lakh Mystery That Was Never Solved
A phone call in the Prime Minister's voice, sixty lakh rupees handed over in a trunk, a ten day trial, and two convenient deaths. The Nagarwala case remains India's favourite unsolved conspiracy.
Read MoreThe Joshi Abhyankar Serial Murders That Terrorised Pune
Four art students, ten murders, and a city that stopped sleeping. The Joshi Abhyankar killings of 1976 and 1977 ended with one of the only fourfold hangings in the republic's history.
Read MorePratap Singh Kairon: The First Assassination of a Former Chief Minister
A former Punjab chief minister forced off the Grand Trunk Road and shot in daylight in 1965. The Kairon assassination brought political violence into the post Nehru era.
Read MoreNanavati vs the State of Maharashtra: The Case That Ended Jury Trials
A naval commander, his wife's confession, three shots in a Bombay flat, and a jury verdict the courts refused to accept. The Nanavati case ended trial by jury in India.
Read MoreThe Mundhra Scandal: The Scam That Shook Nehru’s Government
LIC's money, a Calcutta speculator, and a question raised by Feroze Gandhi in Parliament. The 1957 Mundhra scandal brought down a finance minister and set the template for every scam inquiry since.
Read MoreThe Jeep Scandal: Independent India’s First Corruption Controversy
A wartime purchase of jeeps for Kashmir, a contract signed in London, and a file closed in Parliament. The 1948 jeep scandal set the template for how India handles corruption charges.
Read MoreThe Bhawal Sannyasi Case: The Dead Prince Who Came Back
A prince cremated in Darjeeling in 1909, a sadhu in Dhaka in 1921, and a thirty seven year legal battle that ended at the Privy Council. The strangest identity trial in Indian history.
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