
Days after the Bengaluru Stampede left 11 people dead, the city police arrested Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s marketing head, Nikhil Sosale, at the Kempegowda International Airport while he was trying to fly to Mumbai.
The arrest comes amid a sweeping crackdown by Karnataka authorities. DNA Entertainment Pvt. Ltd, the firm that managed the event, is also under fire. Staffers Kiran, Sumanth, and Sunil Mathew have been detained. The FIR, filed at Cubbon Park Police Station, lists serious charges under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, including voluntarily causing hurt, unlawful assembly, and more.

Fallout at the Top
In a rare move, Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah suspended top police officers, including the Commissioner of Police and multiple senior officials tied to the event.
“Everyone responsible—from RCB to the police to the event managers—will be held accountable,” Siddaramaiah declared. He’s also launched a one-man judicial commission headed by retired Justice Michael D’Cunha to probe the incident.
But it’s not over yet.
KSCA (Karnataka State Cricket Association) officials—Secretary Shankar and Treasurer Jayaram—are reportedly absconding. Notices have been issued for them, along with demands that RCB, KSCA, and Commissioner B Dayananda cooperate with the inquiry.
Meanwhile, the Karnataka High Court, which took up the case suo moto, has asked for a full status report by June 10.
A Celebration Gone Wrong
What should have been a night of joy turned into a nightmare. No real crowd control. No basic planning. Just a corporate spectacle pushed to breaking point—and beyond.
You can blame the event planners. Or the cricket board. Or even the cops. But the truth is: it was all of them.
They turned the fans’ loyalty into a PR stunt, and when the bodies fell, they scrambled to disappear.
And now that the dust has settled, the arrests have begun—but will justice follow?
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