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New Delhi: Relief for BMW hit and run case accused Sanjeev Nanda. Prosecution tells the court that fingerprints taken from the car don't match those of Nanda.
BMW hit-and-run case main accused Sanjeev Nanda's fingerprints do not match any of the fingerprints taken by the police from the car that allegedly ran over and killed six people in 1999.
However, the prosecution told the court that a set of fingerprints found in the car matched with those of Manik Kapoor, an accused and one of the occupants of the vehicle.
The prosecution had taken fresh sets of fingerprints from all the accused on September 1.
Nanda is accused of driving his black BMW while drunk, and fleeing the scene of the accident, after he ran over six pavement dwellers.
The prosecution also filed a supplementary chargesheet in the case incorporating the forensic expert report and some other facts.
According to the prosecution, Nanda, who was driving his BMW in an "inebriated" state, had run over six people in the wee hours of January 10, 1999 near Lodhi Hotel.
It alleged that Nanda and his friends, who were travelling in the car, fled the scene of the accident though the police found some bloodstains on the vehicle later.
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