3 WIVES, 1 HOUSE, 3 DEATHS: Ghaziabad Triple Suicide Mystery Deepens

Three Sisters Die After Falling From Ninth Floor in Ghaziabad; Domestic Conflict, Suicide Note and Family Silence Deepen Mystery

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Ghaziabad Triple Death: Suicide Note, Isolation and Frequent Family Disputes Raise Serious Questions.

Fresh and disturbing details have now emerged in the Ghaziabad triple death case, where three young sisters plunged to their deaths from a ninth-floor apartment late on February 3. While police say they have gathered significant information about the children’s father, the continued silence of the mother has only deepened the mystery surrounding the tragedy.

Eyewitnesses say moments after the girls fell, their mother ran down the apartment stairs screaming and crying, hurling abuses at family members and attempting to cover the blood-soaked bodies with her clothes. After police shifted the bodies to the mortuary, the mother was taken away separately. Since then, no family member has spoken publicly — a silence that investigators say is crucial to the case.

What initially appeared to be a case linked to financial distress has now turned into a probe centered on domestic conflict. Neighbours and people close to the family allege that the household was marked by constant disputes, emotional neglect and frequent verbal abuse, leaving the children isolated inside their own home.

The family lived in Flat No. 907 of Bharat City Society in Ghaziabad’s Tila Mor area — a residential complex with over 1,000 flats. According to residents, the father, Chetan, lived in the apartment with three wives. Two of them, Sujata and Heena, are real sisters, while the third wife belongs to a different community. Another sister would also stay in the flat occasionally. Five children lived in the apartment.

At around 2 am on February 4, three girls fell from the ninth floor and died on the spot. Since that night, the flat has remained locked, sealed in silence and suspicion.

Neighbours say loud arguments and verbal abuse were a regular feature in the household, including shortly before the incident. One resident recalled that while the mother was hysterical after the fall, the father appeared unusually calm — a detail that has raised eyebrows in the society.

Residents are also questioning how three children could take such an extreme step together. They point out that despite government schools being nearby, the children did not attend school and were rarely seen outside the flat.

People living on the same floor say the family remained largely isolated. One neighbour said he had never interacted with the children and barely saw them, describing the household as deeply troubled and withdrawn from society.

After the incident, four women were seen leaving the flat with a male relative who refused to speak to anyone. It was later revealed that Sujata and Heena had rushed from Delhi’s Seelampur after learning about their daughters’ deaths. Those who met them say both mothers were inconsolable and unable to speak.

Family history reveals a complex and disturbing background. Sujata, the eldest of nine sisters, could not conceive for three years, after which the family arranged her husband’s marriage with her younger sister, Heena. Heena had two daughters, while Sujata later gave birth to a daughter and a differently-abled son. The third wife also has a young daughter.

Questions have also been raised over the position of the bodies. One child was found nearly nine feet from the wall, another eight feet away — but the third was discovered just one foot from the building. Residents and investigators are struggling to understand how such landing positions are possible in a jump from that height.

Adding to the suspicion is a suicide note recovered by police. The note uses the word “I” instead of “we,” suggesting it may have been written by only one child. A chilling line in the note reads: “It is better to die than to be beaten,” intensifying concerns about possible physical abuse inside the home.

Police say all angles — suicide, abuse, and family conflict — are being investigated. But until the silence of the adults is broken, the deaths of three sisters in Ghaziabad remain wrapped in unanswered questions and haunting doubt.

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