🧩 In one police summary, a witness claimed hearing rhythmic digging sounds from the house at 3 AM — two nights before the first body was found . The statement was recorded, then quietly omitted from the final chargesheet.
Here’s an interesting, fictional post based on the subject — written in the style of a true-crime or mystery blog: 🕵️♂️ The Nithari Files: Beyond the Headlines nithari crime report
🗝️ The main accused, Surinder Koli, described certain acts happening in a back room that police never officially searched . When later asked why, the lead investigator said: “We didn’t have the key. And no one filed a requisition to break it down.” 🧩 In one police summary, a witness claimed
🔍 No mention of who visited the house regularly in 2005. No follow-up on three missing school records from the local slum. No explanation for why calls from a nearby phone booth to a now-defunct number stopped the day the excavations began. When later asked why, the lead investigator said:
Most people remember the 2006 Nithari killings as a nightmare of missing children and unimaginable horror. But digging into the original crime reports reveals details that still raise chilling questions — ones that were never fully answered.
📦 Alongside skeletal remains, investigators cataloged small personal items: a broken hairclip, a single marble, a strip of cloth embroidered with initials "R.S." — none matching any of the identified victims.