Veerappan Death Date – Vijay Kumar who was top of the Tamil Nadu Special Task Force and ran Operation Cocoon that prompted Veerappan’s passing gives the moment subtleties of pursuing the crook in his book, Veerappan: Chasing the Brigand. Attracted out of his timberland fortification in Tamil Nadu, Veerappan had accidentally move into a rescue vehicle that covert cops from the Tamil Nadu Special Task Force had masterminded. They had established Mr X, a mole, in his positions, and through him, discovered that Veerappan had expected to visit an emergency clinic in Salem for his eye.
That day, Veerappan didn’t see that the name ‘Salem’ had been incorrectly spelled as ‘Selam’ on the emergency vehicle (in their scramble, police had committed the spelling error). The very long term manhunt for the country’s most infamous outlaw finished in the accompanying 20 minutes. The Special Task Force (STF), which had been comprised to grab him, discharged 338 shots at the emergency vehicle, and three of them hit the 52-year-old poacher.
This is the manner by which resigned cop K Vijay Kumar’s new book, Veerappan: Chasing the Brigand, closes. “Record on Koose Muniswamy Veerappan shut,” he composes with seemingly help toward the finish of a high speed last part that depicts Operation Cocoon down to the latest possible moment. “On the off chance that Veerappan hadn’t come on the eighteenth, I don’t have the foggiest idea what might have occurred. It would have recently been one of our sequential failures,” Kumar says. He accepts that strangely, the until now slippery Veerappan wasn’t extremely ready that day.
Vijay Kumar was the top of the Tamil Nadu STF, and was running Operation Cocoon. He had been given the work in 2001 by then boss priest J Jayalalithaa; before that, he had been a piece of the tip top Special Protection Group for Rajiv Gandhi, and in the Border Security Force in Kashmir. He concedes that his book, which nearly peruses like a spine chiller, is one-sided towards the STF. It intently retells the subtleties of the chase after Veerappan, starting with the development of the STF in 1990 – a joint power comprised by Karnataka and Tamil Nadu – to catch him.