Updated On: 14 January, 2024 06:41 AM IST | Mumbai | Gautam S Mengle
Just as the police’s presence of mind and a cabbie’s initiative led to Sulochana Seth’s arrest and discovery of her son’s body in a duffle bag, many other investigations have been saved by quick thinking

Illustration/Uday Mohite
On Monday, the country woke up to the horrific news of Sulochana Seth, CEO of The Mindful AI lab, being arrested for killing her four-year-old son. Seth allegedly drugged and smothered him in a service apartment in Goa and was on her way to Karnataka in a taxi—the body stuffed into a duffel bag in the boot—when she
was intercepted.
While the ghastly and brutal nature of the crime has attracted eyeballs, Seth’s arrest is a textbook example of how quick thinking can be the backbone of crime detection, despite investigation and technology progressing manifold.