Four arrested for allegedly injecting doctor with HIV in Kurnool
Four persons, including a woman, were arrested in Kurnool for allegedly staging a road accident and injecting a doctor with HIV-infected blood. Police said the attack was driven by personal vengeance linked to a past relationship
Published Date - 25 January 2026, 05:09 PM
Kurnool (Andhra Pradesh): Four persons, including a woman, were arrested for allegedly administering an HIV injection to a doctor here, police said on Sunday. The doctor is said to be the wife of the woman’s ex-lover.
The accused were identified as B Boya Vasundhara (34), a resident of Kurnool, Konge Jyothi (40), a nurse at a private hospital in Adoni, and her two children, who are in their 20s. They were arrested on January 24, police said.
“After conspiring with three others and staging a road accident, Vasundhara allegedly injected an HIV virus into a doctor, who is the wife of her former lover,” the official told PTI.
Police said the accused obtained HIV-infected blood samples from patients receiving treatment at a government hospital, claiming the samples were required for research purposes.
According to police, the accused claimed to have stored the infected blood in a refrigerator.
Unable to accept that her former lover had married another woman, the accused conspired to separate the couple.
Accordingly, on January 9 at around 2.30 pm, when the victim, an assistant professor at a private medical college in Kurnool, was returning home on a scooter after duty for lunch, two persons on a motorcycle intentionally rammed her scooter near the KC Canal at Vinayak Ghat, causing her to fall and sustain injuries.
The accused then approached her under the guise of offering help. While attempting to take her into an autorickshaw, Vasundhara allegedly administered an HIV injection before fleeing the spot when the victim raised an alarm, police said.
The official said the victim received immediate treatment and is now fine, with doctors confirming her condition is stable.
Police said the virus cannot survive for days even when stored in a refrigerator, and the only concern was a foreign particle entering the body.
“Since the victim herself is a doctor, she knew the required tests and medication, and other doctors have advised her to return after three weeks as the mutation time,” the official said.
The victim’s husband, also a doctor, lodged a complaint at Kurnool III Town Police Station on January 10, following which a case was registered under Sections 126(2), 118(1), 272 read with 3(5) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).