Luthra Brothers in Custody in Delhi, Set for Goa After Deportation Over Nightclub Fire

Saurabh and Gaurav Luthra, owners of the Goa nightclub gutted by a fire that killed 25, landed in Delhi on December 17 after deportation from Thailand. Goa police secured transit remand, alleging the brothers had ultimate control over the club's safety lapses, and plan to bring them to Goa for questioning.

Updating previous reports on the Luthra brothers' repatriation: After fleeing to Phuket, Thailand, hours after the December 6 blaze at Birch by Romeo Lane in Arpora, Bardez, a lookout circular, blue corner notice, and passport impoundment led to their detention last week in Patong and transfer to Bangkok.

They arrived at Delhi airport on December 17 afternoon via emergency travel certificate. Goa police immediately took custody after Patiala House Court granted transit remand to Judicial Magistrate First Class Twinkle Chawla, citing the brothers' 'ultimate control over operation, safety, permissions, and events.'

A team will escort them to Goa around 11 am on December 18 amid ongoing probes into fire causes and their role. This follows delays in passport processes noted earlier.

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Illustrative split-scene of Goa nightclub fire devastation, owners fleeing to Thailand, and co-owner's detention in Delhi.
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Goa nightclub fire: Luthra brothers flee to Thailand, Ajay Gupta detained

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A fire during a fire show at Goa's Birch by Romeo Lane nightclub on December 7 killed 25 people. Owners Saurabh and Gaurav Luthra fled to Thailand hours after the blaze, while co-owner Ajay Gupta was detained in Delhi. Chief Minister Pramod Sawant has ordered action against illegal clubs.

Saurabh and Gaurav Luthra, owners of the Goa nightclub where a fire killed 25 people, have been deported from Thailand following a delay in passport revocation. They are now en route to India, where authorities plan to detain them for investigation.

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Saurabh and Gaurav Luthra, owners of the Goa nightclub where a fire killed 25 people, fled the country after the incident and were detained in Phuket, Thailand, five days later. Their repatriation to India is being delayed by the slow process of revoking their passports.

An elderly NRI couple in South Delhi's Greater Kailash lost nearly Rs 14 crore in a digital arrest scam that confined them to their home for 16 days. Om Taneja, 81, and Dr Indira Taneja, 77, who returned from the US in 2015, were duped by fake police officers threatening arrest over fabricated money-laundering charges. Delhi Police have launched an investigation into the fraud.

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Delhi Police have arrested five individuals accused of duping a woman of Rs 12.04 crore by selling her a non-existent premium flat in Gurgaon at half price using forged bank documents. The scam involved fake auction papers from the State Bank of India, part of a larger network that has defrauded people across multiple states of over Rs 200 crore. The mastermind, Mohit Gogia, faces charges in 16 similar cases.

Uttar Pradesh police have revealed that the sons of a retired Indian Air Force officer orchestrated his murder amid a property dispute. Yogesh Kumar was shot dead on December 26 in Ghaziabad. One contract killer has been arrested, while the sons and another suspect remain at large.

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The Supreme Court will today pronounce its verdict on bail pleas by Umar Khalid and Sharjeel Imam, along with five others, in the UAPA case linked to the 2020 Delhi riots. These activists have been in jail for over five years, citing trial delays as grounds for release. Delhi Police opposes bail, pointing to the severity of the charges.

 

 

 

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