This Article is From Apr 09, 2016

Mercedes Hit-And-Run: Father Of Teen Allegedly Driving Mercedes Arrested

Mercedes Hit-And-Run: Father Of Teen Allegedly Driving Mercedes Arrested

CCTV visuals show speeding Mercedes car hitting 32-year-old Sidharth Sharma

Highlights

  • Class 12 boy allegedly killed a man by hitting him with speeding Mercedes
  • CCTV footage showed Sidhharth was hit by Mercedes while crossing a road
  • Police arrested the teen on Tuesday but he was let off on bail
New Delhi: The father of a teenager who allegedly killed a 32-year-old business consultant by hitting him with his speeding Mercedes car in Delhi three days ago was arrested on Friday, police said.

"Manoj Aggarwal has been arrested for abetting the crime of culpable homicide not amounting to murder," said Deputy Commissioner of Police Madhur Verma.

Sidhharth Sharma died after being hit by the speeding Mercedes car on Monday night while crossing Sham Nath Marg in north Delhi's Civil Lines area to get some eatables from the nearby market.

Police had arrested the teen on Tuesday but he was let off on bail because he is below 18.  .

After an uproar followed by allegations by the victim's family that police officers were going soft on the accused, police took a U-turn on Friday, not only changing the section mentioned in the FIR but also arrested Mr Aggarwal.

In an official statement on Friday, police said: "On examination of CCTV footage during investigation of case FIR No. 118 being registered at Civil Lines police station, it was found that the juvenile offender was driving his car in extremely fast speed in a residential area which caused the death of Siddharth Sharma."

"It was not the first offence of rash and negligent driving by the juvenile. In the past, he has also been found driving in such a way thereby causing a road accident with another vehicle."

"In view of above, the death of Siddharth Sharma is a case of culpable homicide not amounting to murder and hence section 304 of Indian Penal Code or IPC has been added in place of section 304 A (causing death by negligence) of IPC," said Mr Verma.

The officer further said there had not been a single step taken by Mr Aggarwal in prohibiting his son from taking the vehicle. "This is an act of criminal omission, thereby abetting the crime of the said juvenile. Therefore we arrested Aggarwal."
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