Police Arrest Three Men for Killing Chandranath Rath
Police Arrest Three Men for Killing Chandranath Rath
Introduction
Police in West Bengal arrested three men from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. These men may have killed Chandranath Rath on May 6.
Main Body
Police found the men using a phone number. They saw a money payment at a toll plaza. The killers used a silver car with fake numbers. Then they used a red car and a motorcycle. They used a special gun from Austria. Police say Raj Singh, Mayank Raj Mishra, and Vicky Maurya planned the crime. They say eight people worked together. But Raj Singh's mother says he is innocent. She says he was in another city. She wants a bigger police group to check the case. The three men are now in jail. A judge said they must stay with the police for 13 days. The men face charges for murder and having an illegal gun.
Conclusion
The men are still in jail. Police want to find more people who helped them.
Learning
⚡️ Action Words (Past)
In this story, things already happened. To talk about the past, we often add -ed to the end of the word.
- Arrest → Arrested
- Plan → Planned
Watch out! Some words are "rebels" and change completely. They don't use -ed:
- Find → Found
- Say → Said
🚗 Describing Things
To make a sentence clear, put the color or type before the object:
- Silver car (Correct ✅)
- Car silver (Wrong ❌)
Examples from the text:
- Red car
- Fake numbers
- Special gun
Vocabulary Learning
Three Arrested Across State Lines After Killing of Chandranath Rath
Introduction
West Bengal police have arrested three men from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. They are suspected of being involved in the murder of Chandranath Rath, an assistant to Suvendu Adhikari, on May 6.
Main Body
The Special Investigation Team (SIT) solved the case by tracking a digital payment. A UPI transaction made at the Bally toll plaza helped the police find a mobile number and identify the suspects. The criminals used a silver car with fake registration and chassis numbers, which they left behind after the crime. Furthermore, forensic experts found that the weapon used was a Glock 47X from Austria. Because this gun is very rare in local crimes, the police are now investigating whether organized criminal networks were involved. There are conflicting views regarding the arrests. The West Bengal Police identified the suspects as Raj Singh, Mayank Raj Mishra, and Vicky Maurya, emphasizing that the murder was a carefully planned conspiracy involving about eight people. However, Jamwanti Singh, the mother of Raj Singh, claims her son was wrongly accused. She stated that CCTV footage shows him in Ballia on the day of the crime and has asked for a CBI investigation. While local records show Raj Singh was arrested for a murder in 2020, the Ballia Police noted that West Bengal authorities did not formally communicate the arrest process. The legal process has already started. The suspects appeared in the Barasat court and have been sent to police custody for 13 days. They face several charges, including murder, criminal conspiracy, hiding evidence, and possessing illegal weapons.
Conclusion
The suspects are still in custody for further questioning while the SIT continues to investigate the wider network behind the conspiracy.
Learning
🧩 The 'Complexity Jump': From Simple Sentences to Logical Flow
An A2 learner usually writes like this: The police found a phone number. They found the suspects. The car was silver.
To reach B2, you must stop writing 'lists' and start building 'bridges.' Look at how this article connects ideas using Advanced Connectors and Passive Structures.
🌉 Bridge 1: The 'Furthermore' Pivot
In the text, the author doesn't just say "Also, the gun was a Glock." They use "Furthermore."
- A2 style: And / Also
- B2 style: Furthermore / Moreover / In addition
Why it works: It signals to the reader that you are adding a significant piece of evidence to an argument, not just a random fact.
🛡️ Bridge 2: The Power of the Passive Voice
Notice the sentence: "The suspects... have been sent to police custody."
At A2, you focus on who did it: "The judge sent the suspects to custody." At B2, you focus on what happened to the subject.
The Formula: Be + Past Participle (V3)
- The case was solved...
- He was wrongly accused...
Pro Tip: Use this when the action is more important than the person doing it. In legal or news contexts, this is the gold standard for sounding professional.
⚖️ Bridge 3: Handling Conflict (The 'However' Contrast)
B2 fluency requires you to balance two opposite ideas in one paragraph. The article does this perfectly:
West Bengal Police identified the suspects... However, Jamwanti Singh claims her son was wrongly accused.
Instead of starting a new sentence with "But," use However followed by a comma. This creates a sophisticated pause that prepares the listener for a contradiction.
Vocabulary Learning
Interstate Apprehensions Following the Assassination of Chandranath Rath
Introduction
West Bengal authorities have detained three individuals from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in connection with the May 6 homicide of Chandranath Rath, an aide to Suvendu Adhikari.
Main Body
The investigation into the assassination of Chandranath Rath, which occurred in the Madhyamgram area of North 24 Parganas, was facilitated by the identification of a digital footprint. Specifically, a Unified Payments Interface (UPI) transaction executed at the Bally toll plaza enabled the Special Investigation Team (SIT) to isolate a mobile number and subsequently identify the suspects. The operational execution involved the use of a silver vehicle with forged registration and tampered chassis numbers, which was abandoned post-incident in favor of a red vehicle and a motorcycle. Forensic analysis identified the weapon as an Austrian-made Glock 47X, a firearm of uncommon prevalence in domestic criminal activity, prompting an inquiry into potential international or organized criminal networks. Stakeholder positioning remains polarized. The West Bengal Police have identified the detainees as Raj Singh, Mayank Raj Mishra, and Vicky Maurya, asserting that the crime was the result of meticulous reconnaissance and a conspiracy involving approximately eight individuals. Conversely, Jamwanti Singh, the mother of Raj Singh, has contested the validity of the arrest, asserting that her son was falsely implicated. She cited CCTV evidence placing the suspect in Ballia on the date of the crime and has formally requested a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) inquiry. While the Ballia District Crime Record Bureau noted that Raj Singh had a prior arrest for a 2020 homicide, the Ballia Superintendent of Police indicated a lack of formal communication from West Bengal authorities regarding the arrest process. Legal proceedings have commenced with the suspects being produced before the Barasat court, where they were remanded to 13-day police custody. The charges include murder, criminal conspiracy, suppression of evidence, and the possession of illegal weaponry.
Conclusion
The suspects remain in custody pending further interrogation as the SIT continues to investigate the broader interstate network involved in the conspiracy.
Learning
The Architecture of Nominalization and 'Static' Precision
To move from B2 to C2, a student must transition from narrative English (which focuses on who did what) to conceptual English (which focuses on the process and the state). This text is a masterclass in High-Density Nominalization—the transformation of verbs into nouns to create an objective, clinical, and authoritative tone.
🔍 The Linguistic Pivot: From Action to Entity
Compare these two conceptualizations of the same event:
- B2 (Active/Narrative): The police identified a digital footprint, which helped them find the suspects.
- C2 (Nominalized/Static): The investigation... was facilitated by the identification of a digital footprint.
In the C2 version, the action "identifying" is frozen into a noun ("identification"). This removes the human agent and elevates the "identification" to a formal event. This is the hallmark of legal, forensic, and academic discourse.
⚡ Deconstructing the 'C2 Clusters'
Observe how the text chains nouns to create precise, compound meanings without relying on adjectives:
- "Operational execution": Instead of saying "how they carried out the plan," the author creates a conceptual object.
- "Stakeholder positioning": Rather than "the people involved have different opinions," the text treats their opinions as a physical 'position' in a geopolitical or social space.
- "Uncommon prevalence": A sophisticated way to describe rarity by quantifying the extent of the occurrence rather than just the quality of the item.
🛠 Scholarly Application: The "Abstract Subject" Technique
To achieve C2 mastery, practice replacing Subject + Verb clusters with Abstract Noun + State of Being.
- Draft: "The police are questioning the suspects to find the network."
- C2 Refinement: "Interrogation continues as the SIT investigates the broader interstate network."
Key takeaway: C2 English does not just describe a scene; it categorizes the scene into a series of formal phenomena. The focus shifts from what happened to the nature of the occurrence.