HomeCityDharmasthala mass burial claims: What was found, what wasn’t and why forensics now hold the key
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Dharmasthala mass burial claims: What was found, what wasn’t and why forensics now hold the key

While the initial rounds of digging across 17 designated sites yielded minimal skeletal remains, bones and fragments were ultimately found at a few locations, including the sixth and eleventh sites.

August 19, 2025 / 12:44 IST
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Dharmshala burial case
Dharmshala burial case

The Special Investigation Team’s (SIT) hunt for answers in the Dharmasthala alleged burial case has now shifted from the spade to the laboratory, with soil and skeletal samples becoming the most critical pieces of evidence under scrutiny, according to The New Indian Express.

The Dharmasthala case, which has gripped Karnataka and drawn nationwide attention, traces its origins to disturbing allegations by a former sanitation worker who claimed he was coerced into burying and burning hundreds of bodies, mostly of women and minors, in temple town Dharmasthala between 1995 and 2014.

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The case first came into public view in late June 2025, after the worker approached advocates Ojaswi Gowda and Sachin Deshpande, stating his willingness to help authorities locate alleged grave sites, as reported by India Today.

Following pressure from legal activists and public outrage, the Dharmasthala police registered an FIR based on the worker’s detailed complaint. On July 11, the complainant appeared before a Belthangady court and presented skeletal remains that he claimed to have exhumed himself. His statement asserted he had been forced over years to dispose of bodies, many of which he alleged showed signs of assault. Due to the gravity of his claims, he was immediately placed under witness protection, India Today reported.