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Dausa: A team of Delhi Police Crime Branch investigating the alleged suicide by Rajasthan farmer Gajendra Singh in the national capital visited his family in Dausa to take his writing samples. The writing samples will be sent to forensic laboratory to check if the note found on Gajendra's body after he died was indeed written by him or not.
Gajendra's family claims the note was not written by him and held the Aam Aadmi Party and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal for his death. His relatives have also demanded a Central Bureau of Investigation probe into his death.
Sources say Gajendra was using three mobile phones and the police will study call details of all phones.
The family has given a memorandum to Rajasthan Health Minister Rajendra Rathore who promised to forward it to the Centre.
Meanwhile, the Delhi government and police are at loggerheads over the probe.
Kejriwal's Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) continues to maintain that police investigation would be biased just like their FIR which blames the party. But Delhi Police rubbished AAP's allegations that it is conducting a biased investigation.
Delhi Police Commissioner BS Bassi defended not sharing information with a magisterial probe ordered by AAP government. Delhi government sources say the District Magistrate is seeking legal opinion on filing a criminal complaint against the police.
The complaint will be under Section 188 of the IPC which pertains to obstructing public servant from doing their duty. The magistrate also wants witnesses to come forward and record their statements.
Gajendra Singh, a resident of Nangal Jhamarwada village in Dausa, tied a cloth to a tree and committed suicide at AAP's anti-Land Acquisition Bill rally venue on Wednesday. He also allegedly left a suicide note stating that he had three children and had been disowned by his father due to crop damage after recent rains and hailstorm.
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