Bhopal Gangster Akash alias 'Bhoora Haddi' Arrested From His Own Wedding Mandap in Priest Kidnap-Extortion Case
Digital Desk
Bhopal gangster Akash alias Bhoora Haddi, accused of kidnapping a priest and demanding âš8 lakh ransom, was arrested from his wedding venue. Full story inside.
Arrested at the Altar: Bhopal Gangster Nabbed Mid-Wedding in Priest Kidnap Case
You could not script it more dramatically. While the wedding band played and guests celebrated, Bhopal Police quietly walked into a marriage garden on Airport Road and arrested the groom — a gangster accused of kidnapping a priest and demanding âš8 lakh in ransom. It was not a scene from a Bollywood thriller. It happened in Bhopal on March 11, 2026.
The main accused, Akash Wajpayee, also known as Akash alias Bhoora Haddi, a resident of Nagar area, has approximately 35 criminal cases registered against him and had recently been released on bail in a murder case. Wikipedia Police say he is the kingpin of an organised gang that has made a pattern of targeting vulnerable individuals for kidnapping and extortion.
How the Crime Unfolded
The victim — a priest — was abducted by the gang, held against his will, and subjected to threats until an âš8 lakh ransom demand was made. After escaping from the clutches of the accused, the priest went directly to Kohefia police station and filed a complaint. Wikipedia
Bhopal Police moved with remarkable speed. An FIR was registered on Tuesday night, and by the following afternoon, officers reached the marriage garden on Airport Road and arrested the main accused Akash alias Bhoora Haddi right in the middle of his own wedding ceremony. Wikipedia
The timing of the arrest could not have been more deliberate — it was both operationally smart and a clear message: no celebration shields you from the law.
Four Accused in Custody, Remand Granted
The swift action did not stop with the groom. Police arrested four accused in total and produced them before court, where all four were sent to two-day police remand for further questioning. Wikipedia
During interrogation, a disturbing pattern emerged. It came to light that the accused operated as part of an organised syndicate and had been carrying out such crimes systematically as a gang. Wikipedia Investigators are now probing whether the group has carried out similar kidnappings in the past that went unreported.
A Criminal Record That Speaks Volumes
This is not a first-time offender caught in a moment of poor judgment. Akash alias Bhoora Haddi has a long and documented history of serious crime.
With around 35 criminal cases already on record and a recent bail in a murder case Wikipedia, his arrest at his own wedding marks a decisive turn — one that police say was months in the making. The fact that he felt confident enough to hold a public wedding while an active FIR was being registered against him speaks to either extreme arrogance or the sense of immunity that organised gang members often develop over time.
Bhopal Police deserve credit for not letting that sense of immunity stand.
Why This Case Matters Beyond the Drama
The cinematic circumstances of this arrest — a gangster caught at his own wedding mandap — will dominate headlines. But the more important story is what lies beneath it.
Organised crime targeting priests, traders, and other community figures is a growing concern in Madhya Pradesh's urban centres. When gang networks feel emboldened enough to conduct kidnappings for ransom in a state capital, it signals a breakdown in street-level deterrence.
This arrest is a strong counter-signal. The Bhopal Police's rapid response — from complaint to FIR to arrest in under 24 hours — is exactly the kind of swift, visible action that restores public confidence.
The Bottom Line
Akash alias Bhoora Haddi walked into his wedding ceremony as a free man. He left it in handcuffs. For the priest who was kidnapped and threatened, that is justice arriving faster than anyone might have expected. For Bhopal's citizens, it is a reminder that no matter how brazen the crime — and few crimes are more brazen than holding a priest hostage for ransom — the law does eventually catch up.
Even on your wedding day.
