advertisement
Since the 1980s, Kerala has had a morbid fascination for Sukumara Kurup. The prime accused in the cold-blooded killing of a man named Chacko, Kurup has been on the run for over 30 years, and has grown into an urban legend.
Kurup disappeared so successfully that he may even have the grudging admiration of the very people who are disgusted by his action. There’s not a chance that Malayalam cinema misses to remind its audience of the elusive ghostly figure that still haunts popular imagination. So much so that even a leading star from the Malayalam industry, like Dulquer Salmaan, is willing to play him in an upcoming film.
Sukumara Kurup, born Gopalakrishnan, had a short career as an officer in the Air Force before changing his name and becoming an executive with a marine petroleum company in Abu Dhabi.
Perhaps because it looked so easy, the idea took root in 38-year-old Kurup's mind and he convinced his brother-in-law Bhaskara Pillai, driver Ponnappan and his friend Shahu to be part of a bizarre attempt to fake his own death in order to claim insurance money.
The princely sum at stake was Rs 8 lakh. According to officers who investigated the case, there were no urgent financial compulsions weighing on him, and the entire episode was motivated purely by greed. Some reports allege that Kurup was in search of more funds to pump into a massive, luxurious bungalow he was constructing for himself and his family.
On the morning of 22 January 1984, a bystander in Kunnam, Mavelikakkara, saw an Ambassador car burning on the road. At the wheel was the charred body of a man. Preliminary investigations led the police to believe that the man was Sukumara Kurup.
Besides, there was no trace of charcoal in his respiratory system despite the cause of death supposedly being the fire.
Speaking about the case in 2014, three decades after the cold-blooded crime, Haridas, who was then the Chengannur DYSP, told Deccan Chronicle,
Even though forensic science in the '80s was not what it is now, Sukumara Kurup had clearly underestimated police. It took them three days to see through his elaborate drama. In the stomach of the dead man was the stench of poison. Police concluded that he'd been killed and then planted in the car.
A veteran journalist, who had closely followed the case at the time, reveals how quickly the tables turned.
On 21 January, Chacko, a film representative, was coming out of the Hari Theatre in Karuvatta – then the only theatre between Haripad and Thotlapulli on the NH-47 – after a late show. Married less than a year ago, Chacko's wife Santhamma was pregnant with their first child.
Looking for a ride towards Alappuzha, Chacko ran into Kurup, Bhaskara Pillai, Ponnappan and Shahu. Although the foursome had been travelling in the opposite direction, towards Haripad, they changed directions to offer Chacko a ride.
Chacko got into the Ambassador car without a second thought. He had no idea that his travel companions had spent hours trying to locate a body who'd resemble Kurup and had failed. They'd then decided to find a living person who'd fit Kurup's physical description and had even found a beggar who did so. However, the beggar had jumped out of the moving vehicle to escape them.
Just as their anger and frustration was hitting a peak, Chacko fell into their laps.
Later, the men took the body and placed it in the driver's seat of the Ambassador car, set the car on fire and left.
According to the veteran journalist, Bhaskara Pillai’s hand accidentally got burnt in the process. And this would eventually turn into one of the crucial pieces of evidence in the case.
Chacko’s absence was not noticed initially by his wife Santhamma as she was used to her husband going away for days together on work. It was when she read about the murder in the newspaper that her suspicions grew and Chacko's brother filed a missing persons’ complaint.
Police had already been suspicious of Kurup’s family, since they did not seem to be behaving like a bereaved family. Plainclothes policemen keeping a watch on them noticed that the family had a grand meat meal just two days after Kurup’s ‘death’, contrary to the social practice of the time. Armed with the identification of Chacko, police soon connected the dots.
At some point, the Crime Branch took over the case. During the course of the investigation, Shahu – Kurup's friend – turned approver. The other accused Bhaskara Pillai and Ponnappan would receive life sentences.
But what of Sukumara Kurup?
Despite news of his sightings occasionally, he remained a ghost to police across states.
And they'd keep looking for him every time the old case made it to news for some reason and someone called in to say that they'd seen Sukumara Kurup.
Sukumara Kurup's family had to pay his sin. His wife, Sarasamma, lost her job as a nurse in Abu Dhabi and they were ostracised by the community. At one point, Sarasamma was also an accused in the case, as was her younger sister. With the Kerala Police becoming the butt of jokes, many relatives had also allegedly been thrashed by police over the years in search for Kurup.
And yet, in 2010, when his son Sunit Pillai was getting married, the invite read "son of Mr Sukumara Pillai" (an alias that Kurup used).
After all, the invite did not call him "late". They kept a vigil outside his house, hoping to nab him at last. But ghosts don't appear when you're on alert. Sukumara Kurup did not turn up.
However, Bhaskara Pillai, who'd finished serving his sentence, was a guest at the wedding in Sree Vallaba Temple, Tiruvalla.
The veteran journalist narrates,
Like a grungy, criminal version of “Where’s Waldo?”, seeking Sukumara Kurup has remained a popular game for many.
Justice may never catch up with Sukumara Kurup, but the footprints he's left behind are a chilling reminder of the darkness that resides within ordinary people and the seductive powers of human greed.
(This article was originally published on The News Minute and has been republished with permission.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)