Ex-MPhil Scholar from Bihar Arrested by Delhi Police for Multiple Heists
Educated robber's smoke bomb crimes end in dramatic arrest.
In a plot twist that could rival the gritty drama of Breaking Bad, a highly qualified chemistry scholar from Bihar has been nabbed by Delhi Police for a string of audacious bank and jewelry heists, where his scientific know-how fueled the chaos. Deep Shubham, a 32-year-old MPhil holder from Sitamarhi district, was arrested on October 11, 2025, in Haryana's Sohna area after months on the run as a proclaimed offender. What began as a tale of academic promise spiraled into crime fueled by claimed financial woes, only for the long arm of the law to finally close the net.
Shubham's journey from lecture halls to loot bags started promisingly enough. A standout at Delhi University's prestigious Kirori Mal College, he earned a BSc (Hons), MSc, and MPhil in Chemistry, showcasing a sharp mind for complex reactions and formulas. Eager to pivot careers, he cracked the Common Law Admission Test and enrolled in an LLB program in Visakhapatnam. But family financial troubles struck hard, forcing him to drop out when remittances dried up. "That's when desperation kicked in," Shubham reportedly confessed to interrogators, though skeptics point to his credentials as ample grounds for legitimate employment.
His criminal debut unfolded in 2017 at a Bank of India branch in Sitamarhi, where Shubham ingeniously whipped up a smoke bomb using firecrackers, methyl acetate, and benzene—a nod to his lab-honed expertise. The device created pandemonium, allowing him to flee with Rs 3.6 lakh in cash. Swift police work led to his arrest in Burari, Delhi, and a conviction that should have been a wake-up call. Incarcerated in Sitamarhi jail, Shubham crossed paths with fellow inmate Ritesh Thakur, a hardened criminal whose influence would later prove fateful.
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Released with a clean slate—or so he thought—Shubham relocated to Delhi, ostensibly to rebuild. Instead, in September and October 2021, he reunited with Thakur for two brazen daylight robberies in the Gujranwala area of Model Town, northwest Delhi. Posing as armed thugs, the duo stormed jewelry shops, making off with over Rs 6 lakh in cash, mobile phones, and Rs 70,000 in another hit, all under gunpoint threats to terrified staff. The heists, captured on shaky CCTV, painted Shubham as a far cry from his scholarly past, blending brute force with tactical precision.
Declared a proclaimed offender, Shubham vanished into the shadows, hopping hideouts and even landing a gig at an interior design firm in Sohna to blend in. But on October 9, a tip from Delhi Police Head Constable Ajay lit the fuse. "We got intel he was holed up in Hari Nagar," revealed Deputy Commissioner of Police (Crime Branch) Harsh Indora. Technical surveillance—cell tracking and digital footprints—pinned him down, culminating in a raid on October 11 where Shubham was taken into custody without resistance.
Indora didn't mince words on Shubham's fall: "A man with such qualifications choosing crime over contribution? He's exactly where he belongs now—behind bars." Interrogations uncovered no remorse, only regrets over getting sloppy. With two FIRs at Model Town police station and his Bihar conviction hanging over him, Shubham faces a grim road ahead, potentially years more in the slammer.
This saga underscores a harsh reality: education alone doesn't shield against poor choices, and for Shubham, the allure of quick cash proved a fatal formula. As Delhi Police pat themselves on the back for closing this chapter, it serves as a stark reminder that even the brightest minds can detonate their own futures.
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