Mumbai:
The Navi Mumbai Police arrested a prime suspect and five others in connection with the gangster Sharad Mohol murder case which is being investigated by the Pune crime branch, an official said on Monday.
Acting on specific information, a team of Panvel City Police on Sunday evening nabbed some of the accused from the Panvel highway and others outside a dance bar in Vashi in Navi Mumbai, he said, adding that the six accused were handed over to the Pune crime branch.
The number of persons arrested in the case so far has risen to 14.
Pune Police had arrested eight persons, including prime suspect Sahil Polekar (20) and two lawyers, from a spot on the Pune-Satara highway along with firearms and live bullets.
“The persons nabbed by Navi Mumbai Police include the main suspect Ramdas Marne believed to be involved in the conspiracy and execution of Mohol’s killing,” the official said.
Mohol, who had cases of kidnapping, attempt to murder and murder registered against his name, was shot at by three persons near his house in Sutardara in the Kothrud area on January 5. He died hours later in a hospital from bullet wounds in the chest and shoulder.
Pune Police’s crime branch was hot on the trail of the accused persons and received information that they were in Navi Mumbai, the official said.
The information was passed on to Navi Mumbai Police following which a trap was laid near Panvel highway.
“Police spotted vehicles of the accused by the highway and nabbed some of them while the rest were apprehended from outside a dance bar in Vashi,” the official said.
Mohol (40) rose to fame after he and his aide were accused in the murder of suspected Indian Mujahideen operative Mohammad Qateel Siddiqui inside Yerawada jail here. He was later acquitted in the case.
As per police, Mohol, who hailed from a Mutha village in Mulshi tehsil, was associated with gangster Sandip Mohol, who was killed by the rival Kishor Marne gang in 2006.
Sharad Mohol took the reins of the Mohol gang and avenged the murder of Sandip by killing Kishor Marne in October 2010.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)