Mumbai Watermelon Death Case: Greenish Organs, Morphine Found
Digital Desk
In Mumbai's Paydhuni, four family members died mysteriously after eating watermelon and biryani. Forensic tests show greenish organs and morphine traces, ruling out simple food poisoning. Police and FDA probe poisoning angle amid rising concerns.
Mumbai Watermelon Death Case Turns Mysterious
Greenish organs and morphine traces deepen probe into family's tragic end after late-night meal
Mumbai's Paydhuni area is reeling from a shocking incident where four family members died mysteriously after a late-night snack, with forensic tests revealing greenish internal organs and morphine in one victim's body. The Mumbai watermelon death case, initially eyed as food poisoning, now points to possible toxic poisoning, raising alarms across Maharashtra.
Greenish Organs Raise Red Flags
Preliminary autopsy findings have stunned investigators. The brain, heart, and intestines of all four deceased showed an unusual greenish discolouration. Doctors familiar with the matter say this isn't typical of routine food poisoning. "Such changes suggest exposure to a highly toxic substance," one medical expert noted anonymously, urging caution until the full report.
The victims—part of a family of nine—had dinner with relatives around 10:30 PM on April 25. Later, at 1:30 AM, four of them ate more at home, including biryani and watermelon. By 5 AM, severe vomiting hit, and their condition deteriorated fast. They were rushed to hospital but couldn't be saved.
Morphine Twist in Abdullah's Body
Adding to the puzzle, tests confirmed morphine traces in Abdullah Dokadia's system. This potent painkiller, usually given in controlled medical settings like surgeries or for cancer care, has no clear link here. Police at JJ Marg station, where an Accidental Death (AD) case is registered, are digging into how it entered his body.
Sources say the probe has widened. Officers seized mobile phones, scrutinizing calls, messages, business ties, and bank records of Dokadia. Was it accidental, or something more sinister? No motives have surfaced yet.
FDA Steps In with Sample Sweep
The Food and Drug Administration jumped into action, grabbing 11 samples from the house: biryani remnants, watermelon, stored water, rice, chicken, dates, spices. Inspectors are coordinating with police, testing for contaminants. Initial reports ruled out standard food bugs, shifting focus to chemicals.
Local authorities confirmed the deaths happened within hours of hospital admission. Paydhuni residents are on edge, with whispers of contaminated street vendors or household mishaps. But experts caution against speculation.
Timeline Unfolds Grimly
The sequence is clear from witness accounts. Dinner wrapped late on April 25. The extra midnight meal followed. Symptoms exploded at dawn—vomiting, collapse. Ambulances raced them to care, but it was too late. By morning, the family was shattered.
Police expanded the canvas, questioning relatives and neighbors. No external suspects yet, but the greenish organs and morphine have forensic teams working overtime. The final report, expected soon, could crack it open.
Probe Eyes Conspiracy Angle
This Mumbai watermelon death case has moved beyond biryani or fruit blame. Investigators now probe if a specific poison slipped in deliberately. Dokadia's dealings are under the lens—business rivals? Personal grudges? Mobile data might hold clues.
Maharashtra health officials alerted districts to watch for similar signs. Families here think twice before late eats now. The AD filing keeps options open: accident, suicide, or homicide.
As the investigation grinds on, Paydhuni stays tense. Police promised updates post-forensics. For now, the greenish tinge and morphine shadow a grieving household, hinting at toxins far deadlier than a bad watermelon.
--------
๐จ Beat the News Rush โ Join Now!
Get breaking alerts, hot exclusives, and game-changing stories instantly on your phone. No delays, no fluff โ just the edge you need. โก
Tap to join:ย
๐ข WhatsApp Channel: Dainik Jagran MP CG
Crave more?
๐ Facebook: Dainik Jagran MP CG English
๐ ง Twitter (X): Dainik Jagran MP CG
๐ Instagram: Dainik Jagran MP CG
Share the fire โ keep your crew ahead! ๐๏ธ๐ฅ
Mumbai Watermelon Death Case: Greenish Organs, Morphine Found
Digital Desk
Mumbai Watermelon Death Case Turns Mysterious
Greenish organs and morphine traces deepen probe into family's tragic end after late-night meal
Mumbai's Paydhuni area is reeling from a shocking incident where four family members died mysteriously after a late-night snack, with forensic tests revealing greenish internal organs and morphine in one victim's body. The Mumbai watermelon death case, initially eyed as food poisoning, now points to possible toxic poisoning, raising alarms across Maharashtra.
Greenish Organs Raise Red Flags
Preliminary autopsy findings have stunned investigators. The brain, heart, and intestines of all four deceased showed an unusual greenish discolouration. Doctors familiar with the matter say this isn't typical of routine food poisoning. "Such changes suggest exposure to a highly toxic substance," one medical expert noted anonymously, urging caution until the full report.
The victims—part of a family of nine—had dinner with relatives around 10:30 PM on April 25. Later, at 1:30 AM, four of them ate more at home, including biryani and watermelon. By 5 AM, severe vomiting hit, and their condition deteriorated fast. They were rushed to hospital but couldn't be saved.
Morphine Twist in Abdullah's Body
Adding to the puzzle, tests confirmed morphine traces in Abdullah Dokadia's system. This potent painkiller, usually given in controlled medical settings like surgeries or for cancer care, has no clear link here. Police at JJ Marg station, where an Accidental Death (AD) case is registered, are digging into how it entered his body.
Sources say the probe has widened. Officers seized mobile phones, scrutinizing calls, messages, business ties, and bank records of Dokadia. Was it accidental, or something more sinister? No motives have surfaced yet.
FDA Steps In with Sample Sweep
The Food and Drug Administration jumped into action, grabbing 11 samples from the house: biryani remnants, watermelon, stored water, rice, chicken, dates, spices. Inspectors are coordinating with police, testing for contaminants. Initial reports ruled out standard food bugs, shifting focus to chemicals.
Local authorities confirmed the deaths happened within hours of hospital admission. Paydhuni residents are on edge, with whispers of contaminated street vendors or household mishaps. But experts caution against speculation.
Timeline Unfolds Grimly
The sequence is clear from witness accounts. Dinner wrapped late on April 25. The extra midnight meal followed. Symptoms exploded at dawn—vomiting, collapse. Ambulances raced them to care, but it was too late. By morning, the family was shattered.
Police expanded the canvas, questioning relatives and neighbors. No external suspects yet, but the greenish organs and morphine have forensic teams working overtime. The final report, expected soon, could crack it open.
Probe Eyes Conspiracy Angle
This Mumbai watermelon death case has moved beyond biryani or fruit blame. Investigators now probe if a specific poison slipped in deliberately. Dokadia's dealings are under the lens—business rivals? Personal grudges? Mobile data might hold clues.
Maharashtra health officials alerted districts to watch for similar signs. Families here think twice before late eats now. The AD filing keeps options open: accident, suicide, or homicide.
As the investigation grinds on, Paydhuni stays tense. Police promised updates post-forensics. For now, the greenish tinge and morphine shadow a grieving household, hinting at toxins far deadlier than a bad watermelon.