Summary
A Bengaluru woman, Vidya, died after months of suffering from mercury poisoning, which she alleged was caused by her husband injecting the toxin into her while she was asleep. Her dying declaration, medical trail, and toxicology findings now form the backbone of a murder case that reflects both legal complexity and disturbing psychological patterns.
What Happened: The Incident Timeline
Vidya reportedly lived through nine months of unexplained pain, repeated hospital visits, and deteriorating health. Only near the end could she speak clearly enough to record her statement at Victoria Hospital, naming her husband, Basavaraju, as the one who injected mercury into her thigh while she slept.

Just days after this statement, she died, turning a suspected attempt to murder into a full-fledged homicide investigation under IPC Section 302.
Bangalore Murder – Key Details
| Aspect | Information |
|---|---|
| Victim | Vidya, Bengaluru Rural |
| Accused | M Basavaraju, Husband |
| Method | Alleged mercury injection while victim was unconscious |
| Key Evidence | Dying declaration, toxicology report, hospital records |
| Jurisdiction | Attibele Police Station |
The Legal Lens
From a criminal law standpoint, three elements decide the strength of the prosecution: intent, action, and evidence. This case has all three in unusually stark form.
1. The Dying Declaration
The most critical piece of evidence is Vidya’s recorded statement at Victoria Hospital. Under Section 32 of the Indian Evidence Act, a dying declaration is admissible even without cross examination.
The law rests on a simple rationale: people near death have no incentive to lie. Vidya clearly named her husband and described the method of poisoning.
This alone makes the defence’s burden extremely heavy.
2. The Charge Progression

The FIR initially reflected attempt to murder under IPC 307. After Vidya’s death, the case shifted to IPC 302, which deals with murder.
If the couple had been married for less than seven years, the police may add charges of dowry death under IPC 304B. In dowry death cases, the burden flips. The husband must prove he was not responsible, instead of the prosecution having to prove guilt entirely.
3. The Medical Trail
A conviction in poisoning cases depends on a clean evidentiary chain. This case provides one.
• February 26: The alleged injection when Vidya was unconscious
• March 7: First medical record at Attibele Government Hospital documenting unexplained leg pain
• Referral to Oxford Hospital: Toxicology report confirms mercury in bloodstream
Mercury is not naturally found in the human body. Its presence is almost certain proof of poisoning.
Why It Matters: The Psychological Depth
Beyond the criminal dimension, this case exposes a disturbing psychological pattern.
1. The Choice of Mercury
Selecting mercury is not impulsive. It requires planning. It is slow and causes extended suffering. Injecting it while the victim was unconscious suggests avoidance of confrontation and a desire to inflict harm without visible violence.
This aligns more with calculated cruelty than with spontaneous rage.
2. Intimate Betrayal
Vidya woke up with unexplained pain, sought help, and apparently continued living with someone she trusted. The betrayal becomes deeper when the abuser is also the caregiver.
This form of violence is called intimate terrorism. It traps the victim psychologically long before the physical symptoms begin.
3. The Motive Pattern
If dowry harassment is proven, the behaviour reflects instrumental thinking. Relationships become transactional. When the victim no longer serves the perpetrator’s perceived needs, the perpetrator enters the discard phase, replacing emotional bonds with elimination.
Impact on You: What This Case Signals
For citizens, this case highlights three pressing realities.
- Slow poisoning is harder to detect without early medical documentation.
- Dying declarations are crucial and powerful under Indian law.
- Domestic violence can take forms that fall outside common expectations.
Samay Street FAQs
What is a dying declaration and why is it important here?
It is a statement made by a person who believes they are near death. It holds very high evidentiary value. Vidya’s statement directly names her husband and describes the act.
Is mercury poisoning common in India?
No. It is rare and usually associated with industrial exposure. In a domestic setting, its presence is almost always intentional.
Which sections of IPC apply now?
IPC 302 for murder. Depending on the marriage duration and history of harassment, IPC 304B for dowry death may also apply.
How strong is the medical evidence?
Very strong. Hospital entries create a timeline. Toxicology confirms the poison. There is no natural route for mercury to enter the bloodstream.
Can the accused claim accidental poisoning?
Such a defence is unlikely to stand because mercury cannot accidentally enter the body through food, water, or routine medication.
Samay’s Take
This is not just a crime, it is a blueprint of premeditated cruelty. The combination of a dying declaration, medical proof, and psychological indicators points to a crime executed in silence but built on deep intent. Cases like this remind us that domestic violence is not always loud. Sometimes it is quiet, calculated, and devastating.
Sources
• Case details as referenced in legal analyses involving Attibele Police Station and Bengaluru Rural jurisdiction.
• Insights based on Indian Penal Code sections 302, 307, and 304B.
• Interpretations from Indian Evidence Act Section 32 on dying declarations.
• General toxicology principles regarding mercury poisoning within clinical settings.


