Fathers do not spare the sins. The criminal leaves some signs or symptoms while committing his crime, due to which it becomes easy to recognize him. In such a crime, a young woman from Meerut, India got involved. She had an extramarital affair and killed her husband. She took her lover with her. Then she cut the body into fifteen pieces and stuffed it in a drum. Later, she went to Himachal with her lover to spend her vacation floating in the wind of love. She planned to return and hide the body. Everything was going according to plan. However, a small mistake was the obstacle. While raising it to bury it in the ground, some workers opened the lid of the drum. The stench filled the surroundings. Then the story took a different turn.
The story is about Muskan Rastogi, a woman from Uttar Pradesh, India, and her lover Sahil Shukla. Muskan, who was addicted to extramarital love, brutally killed her husband Saurabh Rajput along with her lover. According to the investigation, Muskan and Sahil killed Sourav on March 3.
The police have recovered videos of Muskan and Sahil spending time alone in the hills. They did not think that they had committed such a big murder. In that video, the two were seen very lively. The couple returned to Meerut on March 17 after their vacation. They decided to hide the body. For this, they called some workers and asked them to bury the drum somewhere. However, since it was very heavy, the workers failed to lift it. At one point, the lid of the drum opened and a rotten smell filled the area. Since the drum could not be lifted, the workers became suspicious about the smell. They left from there.
In this situation, Muskan got nervous. At one point, he went to his father’s house. At first, he tried to put the responsibility of the murder on his sister-in-law and sister-in-law’s husband. However, when his parents started questioning him, Muskan confessed to the murder. When his parents took him to the police station, he confessed to his and Sahil’s crimes. They were later arrested. The couple is currently in judicial custody.