Even though Najeeb's family had yesterday denied receiving any ransom call, the missing JNU student's cousin Sadaf Musharraf today claimed that her father had indeed received such a call around January 15 and had informed police about it.
The accused Shameem (19) had allegedly committed a murder when he was under 18 and spent five months in a juvenile home, said a senior police officer.
Even though he was giving different names, police managed to identify him and have seized one mobile phone and a SIM card which he allegedly used to make the ransom call, he said.
"It is also being probed whether he was just making the calls for earning easy money or there was some ulterior motive," said the officer.
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Shameem was arrested yesterday from Maharajganj in Uttar Pradesh and was brought to Delhi today and put through sustained interrogation by Crime Branch sleuths.
"We receive a lot of calls- some sympathising with us and some troubling us like these ones. There are some calls where people even ask us to search for his body. We inform police about each and every call we receive and they decide which call they have to investigate," Najeeb's cousin said.
Meanwhile, six students who were served notices seeking their consent for polygraph test, have still not agreed to it.
Najeeb's roommate, Mohd Qasim, has also not given his consent for the lie-detector test despite agreeing to it earlier.
Last year, in November, a guard at JNU's Mahi Mandavi Hostel where Najeeb was staying had received a letter which claimed that the missing student was being held captive in Aligarh. However, on investigation, the letter was found to be bogus.
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