The chilling blueprint behind the Ketan Agarwal murder
Siya Goyal studied Meghalaya honeymoon case, learnt from Sonam Raghuvanshi’s mistakes before killing...
Police investigators probing the Siya Goyal case have uncovered evidence suggesting the accused studied past crimes to refine her own plan.
The digital trail left behind by Siya Goyal has shocked investigators, revealing a calculated approach that mirrors the darkest corners of true-crime obsession. As police piece together the death of Ketan Agarwal, a disturbing pattern has emerged: Goyal allegedly used the internet to study the infamous Meghalaya honeymoon case, specifically analyzing the tactical errors made by Sonam Raghuvanshi. For detectives, this isn't just a murder; it is a case of a perpetrator attempting to learn from the "mistakes" of others to evade capture.
A calculated deception
The investigation into the Siya Goyal case has been complicated by a lack of traditional evidence. With no eyewitnesses and an absence of CCTV footage, the authorities are relying heavily on her digital footprints. While her brother initially claimed that she genuinely intended to marry Agarwal, police have contradicted this narrative, pointing to a premeditated strategy that suggests a sinister intent hidden behind the guise of a relationship.
The comparison to the Sonam Raghuvanshi case is central to the police's theory. By dissecting the failures that led to earlier arrests, the accused allegedly sought to bypass the pitfalls that usually lead investigators to a suspect. The meticulous nature of this planning has forced the department to expand its search for digital clues, looking beyond physical evidence to understand the psychological blueprint left on her devices.
Why it matters
This case highlights a grim evolution in criminal methodology: the "copycat" or "researcher" criminal who treats past legal outcomes as a syllabus for their own offenses. When high-profile cases dominate the news cycle, the details—once meant to inform the public—can inadvertently serve as a manual for those with violent intentions. It shifts the burden on forensic teams, who must now bridge the gap between physical reality and the abstract, often encrypted, intentions hidden behind a browser history.
The broader implication here is the chilling accessibility of criminal data. Whether through reports on platforms like Moneycontrol or broader internet archives, the granular details of past investigations are now easily weaponized. As the probe continues, the police are tasked with proving that this was not merely a tragic dispute, but a chillingly cold-blooded execution planned in the quiet anonymity of the internet.
Kabir Sharma writes on culture, technology and everyday life for PoliticalPedia.