Auto Shankar

Gowri Shankar (21 January 1954 – 27 April 1995), better known as 'Auto' Shankar, was a gangster from the Indian state of Tamil Nadu active in Chennai throughout the 1970s and 1980s.[1][2][3]

Auto Shankar
Born
Gowri Shankar

(1954-01-21)21 January 1954
Died27 April 1995(1995-04-27) (aged 41)
Salem Central Prison, Salem, Tamil Nadu
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Criminal statusExecuted
Criminal chargeMurder, rape, and robbery
PenaltyDeath by hanging
Details
Victims6
Span of crimes
1975–1989
CountryIndia
State(s)Tamil Nadu

Early and personal life

Shankar was born in Kangeyanallur near Vellore. While he was in PUC, his father left the family for Odisha. In the early 1970s, he came to Chennai, first living in a Mylapore slum before moving to the fast-developing area of Thiruvanmiyur on the outskirts of South Chennai.[1] Shankar had several wives. He married his first wife, Jagadeeswari, early in his criminal career and had 4 children with her. His second wife, Geeta Sundari, was one of his prostitutes, and after failing to change his criminal ways she burned herself to death. His third wife, Lalitha, was a performer at a cabaret club he frequented.[4]

Career

He survived by peddling cycle rickshaws, and later began to operate an auto, from which he got his nickname. At the time, the area was a criminal hotbed and Shankar began transporting illegal liquor (prohibition was in force), and occasionally girls to the bungalows of VIPs. Prostitution was particularly present in the tourist hotspot of Mahabalipuram, and Shankar soon realized the flesh trade had more money and less risk, thanks to its association with politically influential people who could keep the police in check. Over this time, Shankar became a don involved in prostitution and illicit liquor, running a brothel on LB road and another in Periyar Nagar. His gang eliminated rivals either through the police or muscle. He established contacts with people in the film industry and gave VIPs girls from the film industry. One of his pimps, Babu was murdered in the early 1980s in T. Nagar for which the police arrested the brother of an actress. However, the case became hushed up due to the actress' clout. This experience led Shankar to focus more on the sex trade.[1]

Shankar's third wife, Lalitha, ran off with a pimp and Shankar's friend, Sudalaimuthu, and started their own outfit in the sex trade. An enraged Shankar planned his revenge by pretending to reconcile with the two through mutual friends. One night in October 1987, he invited her to one of his places in Periyar Nagar, then killed and buried her. He then rented the house to an old widow for Rs. 150. Shankar told Sudalai that Lalitha was on an all-India tour with a VIP, and two months later invited him for dinner. Shankar loaded Sudalai with liquor, strangled him, burned his body, and dumped his ashes in the sea. He then had the house renovated and explained away the burn marks by claiming they were roasted meat. When Sudalai's friend Ravi confronted Shankar, Shankar killed him and buried him outside his Periyar Nagar plot. He claimed the burial was of illegal arrack that he was hiding from an upcoming police raid, and posted a false letter to his wife claiming Ravi was in fact in Mumbai.[1]

By 1988, he had a multistorey house, cars, bikes, and connections that could do anything. On 29 May 1988, he and his gang were confronted by 3 members of a rival gang: Sampath, Mohan and Govindraj, who refused to pay for using his women and demanded protection money. Shankar invited them into his den, promising to pay them, and then beat them to death and buried them. At the end of June, Sampath's wife Vijaya filed a complaint with Mylapore police that her husband was missing and Shankar could be responsible. She was advised to file a complaint with Thiruvanmiyur police instead, who arrested Shankar on charges of causing a nuisance and released him. Vijaya sent a petition to the governor, who ordered the police to investigate Shankar. However the reluctant police told Vijaya to not bother them with complaints. A distraught Vijaya turned to her journalist neighbour, who published an article implying they might have been murdered.[1]

Trial

The then Inspector General ordered a special enquiry and the deaths of the three men were discovered. When they arrested Shankar and interrogated him, he confessed to the murders and to the other three murders he had committed. However he escaped on 20 August 1990 with his five accomplices.[1] Shankar's trial was held at the Chengalpattu sessions court.[5] He was sentenced to death along with two of his associates, Eldin and Shivaji, on 31 May 1991. Auto Shankar was hanged in Salem Central Prison in 1995.

Associates

In 1992, Shankar's five accomplices were sentenced to six months of Rigorous Imprisonment after having been found guilty by the Chengai-Anna District Judge N .Mohandoss. The accomplices were Shankar's brother, Mohan, Selva (alias Selvaraj) and the jail wardens Kannan, Balan and Rahim Khan. They were found guilty of criminal conspiracy and resistance or obstruction by a person to his lawful apprehension Subsequently, Mohan was also found guilty of the six murders and was given three Mohan had escaped from the Chennai Central Prison in August 1990 and was captured in Pune on 25 June 1992.

Responses

K. Vijay Kumar, the Tamil Nadu Additional Director-General of Police, claimed that cinema was solely responsible for making Shankar a criminal.[6] He mentioned this during a seminar on "Crime and Media" in Kerala.

The trial has become widely known across the nation since the Supreme Court invoked the American free speech doctrine and the case became oft-quoted in relation to journalistic exposés.[7][8][9]

See also

References

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