City
Epaper

NIA special court sentences another key LeT operative in Bengaluru prison radicalisation case

By ANI | Updated: May 2, 2026 22:50 IST

New Delhi [India], May 2 : Another key operative of the proscribed Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) terrorist organisation has been convicted ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], May 2 : Another key operative of the proscribed Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) terrorist organisation has been convicted and sentenced by a special court of the National Investigation Agency (NIA) in the 2023 Bengaluru prison radicalisation case.

The Bengaluru special court has sentenced Vikram Kumar, also known as Chota Usman, to seven years of Rigorous Imprisonment (RI) along with Rs.30,000 in fine, under various provisions of IPC, UA (P) Act and Explosive Substances Act.

Vikram is the eighth accused to be convicted and sentenced in the case, re-registered by NIA as RC-28/2023/NIA/DLI. Just last month, the court had sentenced seven other accused, including mastermind and LeT member T Naseer, who had hatched the terror radicalisation conspiracy while being an under-trial prisoner in the Parapanna Agrahara Central Prisons in the 2008 Bengaluru serial blast case.

NIA investigation had revealed that the accused Vikram Kumar was radicalised and recruited by Naseer and co-accused Junaid Ahmed while in the Bengaluru prison. He had stayed in touch with Naseer and Junaid after his release. In May 2023, Vikram had collected a dead drop of hand grenades and walkie-talkies from Ambala in Haryana and handed them to a co-accused in Bengaluru.

Vikram, who was funded by Junaid, was also involved in the larger conspiracy to facilitate the escape of T Naseer en route from the prison to a court, as part of LeT's agenda to promote terror activities in India and damage national security and sovereignty, as per the investigations of NIA.

The case was originally registered by the Bengaluru Central Crime Branch (CCB) in July 2023 following the seizure of arms, ammunition and digital devices from habitual offenders, who had planned to unleash a series of terrorist attacks in Bengaluru city to further LeT's activities. NIA, which took over the case from CCB, had uncovered the larger conspiracy involved in the case, including the plot to facilitate Naseer's escape.

The anti-terror agency had filed a chargesheet against 12 accused persons, including Junaid, who is still absconding. Efforts are on to track Junaid.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"Damning admission of criminal nature of their actions": Iran condemns Trump's "pirate" remarks on seizure of vessels

NationalFive found dead inside Gurugram house; husband critical after suspected poisoning attempt

InternationalKuwait did not export crude oil in April for first time in 30 Years: Report

InternationalLift naval blockade, end war on all fronts including Lebanon: Iran sends 14-point counter-proposal to US

InternationalDo what it takes to reverse "disintegration" of NATO: Poland PM Tusk

National Realted Stories

NationalWill support in formation of non-BJP govt in Assam, hopeful of victory on 10-12 seats: AIUDF

NationalAIIMS Delhi introduces India's first portable MRI system for bedside brain imaging

National"Do not deceive women in name of women's reservation": Congress' Supriya Shrinate slams BJP

NationalIndiGo issues travel advisory as bad weather disrupts flight operations in Jaipur

NationalUttarakhand: CM Dhami meets Anganwadi Workers at Secretariat