earlier statement recorded under section 161 CrPC
statement, P.W.3 specifically recounted that his father, the Appellant,
was shouting at his mother
Moreover, the deceased's declaration was not a
solitary narration; she recounted the events first to P.Ws. 2 and
8 immediately after
matrimonial home.
12. P.W.2, the father of the Appellant, recounted that his son
and the deceased often quarreled, which he attempted to resolve ... deceased together in their separate room within the same house.
They also recounted hearing the deceased's loud cries and, upon
rushing
facts
might not be accurate, leading to minor discrepancies in his recounting.
18. P.W.2, the complainant, on the other hand, described
admitting guilt.
P.W.12, the informant and brother of the deceased,
recounted that the Appellant informed him of the deceased's
disappearance
limited
cognitive abilities, her capacity to accurately perceive, recall,
and recount events is highly questionable. The inherent
susceptibility of young children to suggestion and influence
wife of the informant, also directly
implicated the Appellant, recounting how she saw him
assaulting her mother-in-law with a lathi and then attacking ... seen near the victims immediately
after the attack, with P.W.16 recounting how she found the
Appellant assaulting the victims