Crime, she wrote
The femme fatale is a popular figure in crime fiction. Dashiell
Hammett’s voluptuous blondes with beautiful faces and stone cold hearts
ready to commit murder with panache and equal ruthlessness; Philip
Marlowe’s redheads with revolvers and the hot-blooded murderesses of
George Simenon’s works lend a dark glamour to the female criminal. In
reality, however, the truth may be more mundane and gory; devoid of the
sheen of good fiction. The deceptive gentleness of Kerala—the state of
friendly people and emerald fields—is suddenly Ground Zero for the femme
fatale with a yen for blood and con. The number of crimes recently
exposed in the state where women have emerged as linchpins has shot up
to such an extent that it has given birth to an altogether new saying:
there is a woman behind every successful crime. She cooks up a storm
full of murder, sex, blackmail and intrigue.
Saritha S Nair,
Kerala’s new Betty the Blackmailer is the scandalous seductress—in
concert with her allegedly murderous beau Biju Radhakrishnan—who has put
the political establishment in a bind. The divorced Saritha was a
college dropout who grew up in a dysfunctional family.
The taste
for the good life brought her a like-minded partner in the form of Biju.
Together they wove a net of fraud and blackmail, trapping starlets,
politicians and prominent businessmen in their net. Her call details to
Chief Minister Oomen Chandy’s aides (Chandy would speak to people only
through those cell phones) leaked by a TV channel almost threatened to
bring the government down. If it was not for the close relationship with
some senior luminaries in the Communist Party that led the previous
government—an important ex-minister was her “uncle”—Chandy would’ve been
cornered into complete humiliation and despair.
Saritha’s allure
over all those she dealt was most over Biju. Saritha’s is a cheap dime
novel story—she married a Dubai-based businessman, whom she divorced in
2006 to live with Biju. Biju’s wife Reshmi complained to the cops that
Saritha wrecked her marriage and her husband abandoned her for Saritha’s
sake. Later, Reshmi was found dead in her bathroom. When Biju was
arrested from a Coimbatore hotel two weeks ago, he was charged with
murdering his wife through poison. Kerala’s Crippen alleged that Saritha
was in a relationship with former UDF minister, K B Ganesh Kumar, and
shared hotel rooms in Coimbatore where Ganesh had gone for an official
function. Earlier, Ganesh’s wife had complained of his philandering
accusing Chandy of shielding her. The chief minister finds himself in
the unenviable position of being cornered in this scandal, which has
provided much grist for Kerala’s rumour mills.
Another woman, the
actor and dancer Shalu Menon, is under the scanner after reports
pointing at her role in Saritha’s fraudulent schemes. Police suspect
that it was Shalu who helped Biju to leave Kerala the day Saritha was
arrested. Shalu and her mother were reportedly in the room next to the
one in which Biju was staying as well. Police sources reveal that
Saritha was a honey trap for the big wheels in politics and business;
blackmailing them after photographing them in compromising positions
with her. More revelations involving the state’s power elite are
expected to fall out of Saritha’s and Biju’s closets as the police
continue their investigations of how she defrauded many using their
jointly owned company Team Solar as a front.
A survey of the
inmates of Viyyur Women Prison showed that 100 per cent of the female
prisoners in the prison are from Kerala. Fifteen out of 32 are convicted
for murder and three are on trial for murder. Two hundred and seven
women are incarcerated in different jails in the state, with 56
convicted criminals and 151 facing trial. Earlier, women caught by the
police were found to be only involved in minor crimes like bootlegging
and selling a few grams of marijuana.
Some, like their universal
sisters, were just prostitutes—more bathos than blood. The marquee of
mayhem is the new show in town—now women criminals in the state are
being arrested for serious offences, ranging from brutal murders to
multi-crore scams. Incidentally, Kerala tops India’s crime list with
455.8 cases for every 1,00,000 persons according to the National Crime
Records Bureau. Ironically, along with Bihar and Chhattisgarh, Kerala
tops the states with the highest percentage of women legislators with
criminal records. A PRS Legislative Research study shows that 83 per
cent of women legislators have criminal records in Kerala.
The
modus operandi of women criminals in the state is a cocktail of
politics, sex, cinema and crime; in some cases the la belle dames sans
merci even marry hardcore criminals if it helps them to successfully
execute their plans.
However, 54-year-old medical doctor Omana
Edadan was flying solo; she is one of the most memorable of women
criminals, perhaps the first one to capture public imagination in recent
times. Omana is wanted in the murder of her lover Muralidharan in 1996.
The middle-aged Lucretia Borgia of Kerala had poisoned Muralidharan.
With surgical precision, she went on to dismember him, cut up his bones
into little convenient pieces at her home in Payannur, where she lived
alone. At her macabre best, she carefully packed her unfortunate
paramour’s flesh and bones separately in plastic packets. The internal
organs, she cut into very small pieces and flushed down the toilet. The
police calculate it took her a mere three hours to accomplish the
ghastly operation. Thereafter, she calmly placed packets in the boot of
her car, and drove to the salubrious Tamil Nadu hill station Ooty where
she checked into a hotel after parking the car at the railway station.
Thereafter,
she made an attempt to dump the various parts of Muralidharan into a
ravine. She then hired a taxi to go to nearby hill retreat Kodaikanal,
which she thought provided a better option to dispose of the remains.
However, the taxi driver got suspicious and informed the police. Omana
was arrested. The deadly doctor spent a few months in Madras Central
Jail. Soon, she managed to get out on bail. However, she jumped bail and
has been in the wind since 2001.
“With better education and the
increasing social exposure it entails, women have grown increasingly
confident of doing anything that men are capable of. This is reflected
in crime as well and they exploit the opportunities as well as men do.
In fact, women are in a better position to exploit the weaknesses of
prospective victims,” says James Vadakkancherry, a reputed
criminologist.
According to James, women are capable of
formulating a better modus operandi by virtue of their looks, approach
and communication skills. He cited the more recent example of Shobha
John, the only woman who holds the dubious honour of being in the Kerala
Police’s ‘goonda’ list, to make his point.
Shobha made headlines
in 2006 when she blackmailed and then kidnapped the former Thanthri
(head priest) of Sabarimala, Kandaru Mohanaru. He was abducted and taken
to a flat in Kochi and photographed with a woman in a compromising
position. It’s not just blackmail and honey traps Shobha was an expert
at. She also ran a successful prostitution racket. She figured
prominently in the shocking Varappuzha sex scandal where a minor girl
was bought from her mother and then pimped out to several high profile
clients. She was caught and booked. But that wasn’t all. Next, one of
her gang members who were also arrested by the police sang like a canary
on their boss’s crimes. He accused Shobha of murdering one of her gang
members. Sent to jail, the blackmailing belle became a source of
dangerous embarrassment to the reputation of many of the high and mighty
in the state. Out on bail, her reputation as an expert blackmailer had
the political and bureaucratic class nervous. In fact, in her bail
petition, which she filed in Kerala High Court in the second week of
June, where it is pending since, Shobha claimed that the police were
implicating her in one case after another. The reason she gave was that
her revelations would expose many top politicians.
“There are many
reasons why women like Shobha end up as criminals. Many of them have
grown up in troubled families or have witnessed crimes in their
childhood. The submissive personality of women may also induce them to
commit a crime for their partners’ sake in some cases,” says A V Druhin,
Professor, Psychiatry department, Academy of Medical Science, Kannur.
He observed that women in their 40s seem willing to go to any extent to lead luxurious lives.
“Women
can better sell a fraud than men since they can instill confidence in
the victims. They also fly below the police radar much better than men.
For instance, a few years ago, an attractive woman successfully donned
the role of a guide in smuggling spirits. Though the gang was eventually
caught, it was the presence of a woman that helped them to initially
evade the police net. Besides, women seem to be better equipped in
building contacts with the powers-that-be, helping them to evade the
long arms of the law for longer periods than men,” says C P Udayabhanu, a
noted criminal lawyer of the Kerala High Court.
Crime and glamour
are kissing cousins, as seen in the case of the 25-year-old actress
Leena Maria Paul, who was born in Kerala but brought up elsewhere, and
her male friend from a south Delhi farmhouse where they were hiding,
following a cheating case which was registered against them in Chennai.
Leena, who has acted in Malayalam films like Red Chillies, is a
well-educated girl who entered the field with the help of her friend
Balaji. During her interrogation, Leena confessed that it was a desire
for a lavish lifestyle and easy money, which made her take part in
criminal activities. Along with Balaji, she has been involved in many
other cases including defrauding a Chennai-based bank of `19.22 crore.
Justice
D Sreedevi, a former chairman of the women’s commission, adds, “Money
is the root cause of all evil. It also spoils the life of women. Those
who are involved in crimes like this like to lead a luxurious life and
want to find an easy way to get money for it. Surprisingly, the women
are ready to go to any extent, even commit murder, to earn money. The
number of alcoholic women is also increasing. Under the influence of
alcohol they commit any crime.” But only eight women have been convicted
in alcohol related cases so far while 27 are facing trial.
Money
plays an important role in sex crimes and murder. A case célèbre was of
former Kerala beauty queen Sherin and her alleged lover Basit Ali. In
November 2010, Bhaskara Karanavar who had returned to Kerala after
retiring from the US government, was found murdered in his house in
Alappuzha. After investigations, the police concluded that the murder
was planned and executed by the dead man’s daughter-in-law Sherin and
Basit.
Basit and two accomplices smothered Karanavar to death,
guided by Sherin. The provocation was Sherin’s name being cut off from
Karanavar’s will. The police tech and cyber division examined calls from
her cell phone and Orkut chat records to nail her.
Further
investigations revealed a sordid network of crime. Ali, on the run after
the murder and arrested from Karnataka reportedly ran a hawala network
in Kerala. Cops said that Sherin seduced Ali and promised him they would
live together with the proceeds. Sherin had a criminal history; when
she and her husband Binu were living with Karanavar in New York she
allegedly blackmailed her father-in-law for money, threatening divorce.
The cops said she was jailed for credit card fraud and stealing money on
her job.
In the opening chapter of Raymond Chandler’s The Big
Sleep, gum shoe Philip Marlowe is visiting a client living in a stately
home. The passage ends: “I was still staring at the hot black eyes when a
door opened far back under the stairs. It wasn’t the butler coming
back. It was a girl.”
Well the butler didn’t do it. She did.
http://newindianexpress.com/magazine/Crime-she-wrote/2013/06/30/article1655916.ece
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