Bloke ‘found 31 years after his kidnap’ is investigated for FRAUD – after he ‘returned to a different family months ago’
After being purportedly reunited with a different family five months ago, a man who “returned home after being kidnapped 31 years ago” is the subject of a fraud investigation.
Since the currently unnamed Indian man has left both the police and both families perplexed, the joy of a reunion was swiftly dashed.
The suspect, previously known as Bhim Singh, entered a Ghaziabad police station by miracle last Thursday.
He stated that he was kidnapped when he was eight years old, thirty-one years ago.
The man had described how, in 1993, he was abducted while returning home from school and coerced into working as a child laborer raising sheep and goats.
In a startling change of events, however, a completely other family from a different part of India claimed him as their son after he had returned to them five months prior.
read more in missing people
In July, a Dehradun family came forward to say that the enigmatic figure was actually their 25-year-old son Monu Sharma, who had returned after being kidnapped 16 years earlier.
They claimed they hadn’t heard from their “son” since he departed for Delhi in search of employment.
The oldest of the four Singh siblings, Santosh, said he didn’t think the man could be anyone other than a member of their family.
“Why should I doubt him?” they asked. He had addressed me by name when he first saw me. He referred to our second sister Rajo by her pet name after they had met.
Tularam, Santosh’s father, stated: “He told me everything about our home in Shaheed Nagar last week when I brought him home from the police station.
“I’m not sure what to believe now that I’ve learned that he did the same thing with a family in Dehradun.
“He made multiple attempts to leave the house by himself. He attempted to persuade us that he preferred to sleep on the ground floor at around nine o’clock at night.
“I believed that my family was at last complete and that my missing son had returned.
“But now, I am wondering if we have been cheated.”
“Some people came home and said we need to get evidence that he is our son,” the family’s mother argued, expressing greater certainty that the man was her son.
“To silence them all, we’ll conduct a DNA test.
“You can’t fool a mother’s sight. He is my son.
MONU SHARMA’S STORY
He had previously identified himself as Monu Sharma before going back under the alias Bhim.
He claimed to officers that unknown people had kidnapped him and taken him to a secluded part of Rajasthan.
He claims that he was made to work as a laborer for a shepherd’s family in the initial version of his abduction.
Then he said a truck driver who had come to the region to buy livestock saved him.
According to Asha, Monu’s purported mother, “I knew it was him, my son, when I saw his photograph in July.”
“I was ecstatic to see him again after all these years.
After we took him in, he started working at the vegetable market in Niranjanpur.
But he said he wanted to discover better work possibilities, so he went for Delhi on November 21.
“Once he arrived in Delhi, we requested him to call, but he never did.
“I always suspected he was a fraud,” said Kapil Dev Sharma, Asha’s husband, echoing his wife’s suspicions.
His arguments with us were frequent, and he even told my wife that our grandkids shouldn’t live with us.
“I am now certain that he has been lying to us after learning about (the) Ghaziabad event.
“He should be arrested so that he can’t play with the emotions of other families.”
Kapil Dev Sharma claimed that by fabricating a story about his difficulty, the man stole thousands of dollars from his company and a local non-governmental organization before departing for Delhi.
Read More on The US Sun
The man is being investigated by police, who have verified that he is the same individual.
Reports state that he was taken into custody by authorities on Saturday.
Note: Every piece of content is rigorously reviewed by our team of experienced writers and editors to ensure its accuracy. Our writers use credible sources and adhere to strict fact-checking protocols to verify all claims and data before publication. If an error is identified, we promptly correct it and strive for transparency in all updates, feel free to reach out to us via email. We appreciate your trust and support!