A court in
Bhopal has given anticipatory bail to
Singh" class="entity-link entity-person" data-entity-id="131904" data-entity-type="person">Giribala
Singh but rejected
Samarth's bail application. He's been asked to surrender by 23 May.
Singh" class="entity-link entity-person" data-entity-id="131904" data-entity-type="person">Giribala
Singh has said she doesn't know where her son is, but added that he will seek bail in the high court and will surrender if it's rejected."Our lawyer advised him to stay away. He told him you'll be lynched if you came out. There's a tirade against him, people are calling for his hanging," she told video platform
Mojo Story."You must remember that my son has lost a deeply loved one, he's lost his companion in life. And we can't even grieve… Everyone is against us," she said.
Twisha's family, meanwhile, have refused to cremate her body and sought a second post-mortem - the first autopsy report, which the
BBC has seen, said she died by hanging, but it also spoke of injuries sustained before her death. A court has turned down their request but ordered the authorities to protect the body from decomposing.With
Samarth still absconding,
Twisha's family making grave allegations against the Singhs and the former judge giving interviews about the deceased's alleged mental health issues, there has been relentless media coverage of the case. A "justice for
Twisha-sharma" class="entity-link entity-person" data-entity-id="131908" data-entity-type="person">
Twisha Sharma" page has come up on
Instagram and has found its way into the media coverage.Photo credit
Twisha's familyTwisha and
Samarth had been married only for five monthsThe extraordinary interest in the case is because of who
Twisha was and the reputation of the family she married into - in public perception, members of
India's powerful judiciary are meant to lead by example.A model and actor,
Twisha was crowned Miss
Pune in 2012 after winning a beauty pageant in the western Indian city. She had featured in a number of advertising campaigns and acted in a Telugu-language film. In recent years, she had also worked as a marketing professional with private firms. Friends and family describe her as happy, generous and ambitious.Her family said she met
Samarth, a lawyer based in
Bhopal, through a dating app in 2024 and the two married in December 2025. Photographs from their wedding day show the happy bride and groom posing for pictures.But the
Sharmas say tensions started soon after the marriage. They allege that despite giving dowry at the time of marriage, they were constantly taunted by the Singhs that the wedding was not according to their "standards" – an accusation
Singh" class="entity-link entity-person" data-entity-id="131904" data-entity-type="person">Giribala
Singh has rejected. (Giving and receiving dowry is illegal in
India, but it is still widely practised.)The couple's relationship has come under scrutiny after
Twisha's family released what they said were recent Whatsapp messages from her where she alleged torture by the Singhs. "My life is a living hell," one message read.The biggest point of friction between
Twisha and her in-laws, the
Sharmas say, came in April after she became pregnant. They allege that "her husband and mother-in-law questioned her character and accused her of carrying someone else's baby" and "forced her to undergo an abortion in the first week of May".
Singh" class="entity-link entity-person" data-entity-id="131904" data-entity-type="person">Giribala
Singh has denied the allegations – she says that it was
Twisha who insisted on the abortion saying that she did not want children.
Twisha's father Navnidhi Sharma told
BBC Hindi that the last time they spoke to their daughter was on 12 May, the night of her death, when she called him on WhatsApp at around 21:41 local time [16:11 GMT]."
Twisha was talking to her mother when suddenly the line dropped," he said, adding that their calls went unanswered for the next 20 minutes, after which
Singh" class="entity-link entity-person" data-entity-id="131904" data-entity-type="person">Giribala
Singh picked up the phone and said, "she is no more".Vishnukant Tiwari/
BBC HindiRetired judge
Singh" class="entity-link entity-person" data-entity-id="131904" data-entity-type="person">Giribala
Singh (right) has been criticised for discussing
Twisha's health issues in publicThe
Sharmas, who first reported their daughter's death to the police, have questioned why
Twisha's in-laws did not inform the police. "A retired judge surely must know what the protocol in such cases is," Navnidhi Sharma asked.
Singh" class="entity-link entity-person" data-entity-id="131904" data-entity-type="person">Giribala
Singh said the delay was because they prioritised rushing
Twisha to hospital.The former judge, who's named as a suspect in the police complaint, has also drawn criticism for addressing a press conference and giving long media interviews where she's discussed
Twisha's mental health and called her "liberal" - when asked to explain the term by an interviewer, she spoke of "promiscuity". Her comments led to a huge outrage with many calling for cancellation of her bail and demanding her arrest.
Twisha's father said it was an attempt to tarnish his daughter's name.'I have been rejected by dozens of men over dowry'Prayagraj: An alleged dowry death and a gruesome revengeThe family have also questioned the police investigation and alleged lapses in the way the inquiry is being done. On Wednesday,
Bhopal's police commissioner Sanjay Kumar acknowledged to the
BBC that there had been lapses, but he ruled out murder and said, "based on the post-mortem report and our investigation so far, this is a case of suicide".
Twisha's father has questioned both the post-mortem report and the police investigation, insisting that his daughter was murdered and alleged that "influential people are trying to derail the investigation".Police commissioner Kumar's comments, however, are unlikely to be the last word in the case. Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav said he would seek an inquiry by the federal police and assured the Sharma family that the government would "fully assist" them in the case.