4 Days to Catch the Rich Monster, 4 Hours to Release Him - Why Shivam Mishra's Escape Will Make You Lose Faith in India Forever
Four days later, police finally drag him in. Four hours after that? He's out on bail, smirking, while victims rot in hospitals. This isn't justice. This is a savage slap in the data-face to every ordinary indian who dares to believe the law applies to everyone.
Shivam didn't just "accidentally" crash – he weaponized his luxury beast on a busy road, plowing into pedestrians and vehicles with zero regard for human life. One biker was catapulted 10 feet like a ragdoll; six people ended up injured, their bodies crushed under the weight of unchecked privilege. While the Lambo got towed, the victims got lifelong scars – because daddy's money can't buy back shattered bones.
Four Days to arrest a Known Culprit? Pathetic:
Everyone knew who owned the car. Eyewitnesses, viral videos, the smashed Lambo screaming guilt – yet it took police four full days to "arrest" Shivam. Four days for the rich brat to hide, lawyer up, and plot his escape. If this was your son or mine? We'd be in cuffs before the ambulance left the scene.
Bail in Hours – Because "Procedural Lapses":
Arrested in the morning, free by afternoon on a laughable ₹20,000 personal bond. The court slammed police for "serious procedural lapses" and let him go. Translation: Technicalities trump blood on the streets. shivam even argued his own case like a smug overlord, while victims couldn't even afford proper medical care.
The Dummy driver Lie – Classic Rich Kid Evasion:
Desperate to dodge blame, shivam and his team tried pinning it on a "driver" named Mohan. police called it out as a blatant scam to shift responsibility. But who cares about truth when your father owns half of Kanpur's tobacco empire? Lies fly when money backs them.
₹20,000 Bail for Destroying Lives? Insulting:
That's it – a personal bond worth less than a fancy dinner. For endangering dozens, causing mayhem, and fleeing the scene, shivam paid peanuts to walk free. Imagine the victims' hospital bills dwarfing that amount tenfold. This isn't bail; it's a bribe disguised as law.
Victims Abandoned, Brat Celebrated:
While injured pedestrians fight for survival – broken limbs, trauma, lost wages – shivam is back home, probably polishing his next supercar. No remorse, no accountability. The system didn't just fail the victims; it spat on them and called it "due process."
This Proves the System is Rigged for the Rich:
In a country boasting "Sabka Saath," one tobacco heir exposes the ugly truth: Justice has two doors – one instant and brutal for the poor, one revolving and velvet for the elite. shivam Mishra didn't just crash a car; he crashed our faith in equality. And they say the indian judiciary never disappoints? Yeah, it never disappoints the powerful.