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A polygraphic test is to be conducted on Aaftab before the narco test for which his consent is needed, and the police have been informed about that, it said.
”We are not conducting the narco test on Aaftab today,” said FSL Assistant Director Sanjeev Gupta.
Punit Puri, also an assistant director at the FSL, said the polygraphic test will be conducted if consent is received. ”It will be followed by medical tests and after these only the narco will be performed.”
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Assistant Director Sanjeev Gupta further said they have received request for the narco test ”and we have started our work as well. Our director Deepa Varma has instructed to take this case on priority.”
”There was a meeting on Sunday between the FSL and the police team and everything has been decided but some parameters need to be completed before the narco test and they have been informed to the police. As soon they complete them we can do narco,” he said.
Explaining the narco test, Rajneesh Gupta, the FSL crime scene in-charge, said it is a lengthy process with various disciplines such as medical practitioners involved as this is done in the operation theatre.
”Experts from FSL, photo division, narco specialists are there so all teams work together and their consent is also needed to work in coordination. Our officers are already having meeting with all departments to take their consents and when we get it we will have a date with us which we will inform you,” he told PTI.
A senior FSL official said earlier in the day an elaborate discussion was held on Sunday with the Delhi Police team probing the Shraddha Walker murder case. As Aaftab Poonawala’s five-day police custody ends on Tuesday, the Delhi Police is running against time to get the test conducted.
The narco analysis test will be conducted at Dr Baba Saheb Ambedkar Hospital here in Rohini here.
In an order dated November 17, a Delhi court had directed the city police to complete the narco analysis test within five days, while making it clear that it cannot use any third degree measure on him.
Narco analysis, also known as truth serum, involves intravenous administration of a drug (such as sodium pentothal, scopolamine and sodium amytal) that causes the person undergoing it to enter into various stages of anaesthesia.
In the hypnotic stage, the person becomes less inhibited and is more likely to divulge information, which would usually not be revealed in the conscious state.
Investigating agencies use this test after other evidences do not provide a clear picture of the case.
The Delhi Police had earlier said it sought Aaftab Poonawala’s narco analysis test as his responses during interrogation were ”deceptive” in nature.
The Supreme Court has ruled that narco-analysis, brain mapping and polygraph tests cannot be conducted on any person without his or her consent.
Also, statements made during this test are not admissible as primary evidence in the court, except under certain circumstances when the bench thinks that the facts and nature of the case permit it.
Twenty-eight-year-old Poonawala allegedly strangled his live-in partner Shraddha Walkar and sawed her body into 35 pieces which he kept in a 300-liter fridge for almost three weeks at his residence in South Delhi’s Mehrauli before dumping them across the city over several days past midnight.