▲ Sharma (center) behind 50 or more serial murders


India's 60s elite doctor is shocked by the involvement of a serial murder that killed more than 50 taxi drivers and sold them.

According to CNN's broadcast on the 31st, he fled with a gap that was briefly paroleed while serving as a serial killer in India. Recently arrested, Debender Sarma (62) confessed to being involved in the murder of more than 50 taxi drivers in the past.

Originally sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of seven taxi drivers between 2002 and 2004, and after spending 16 years in jail, Sarma, who was granted parole for 20 days, actually committed more murders.

He returned to jail after his parole, married another woman in Delhi, India, and died for six months before being caught by the police.

Having a degree in traditional Indian medicine, he shared the entire process from being caught by the police to falling into a terrible killer.

After graduating from college, he had been running a hospital in Rajasthan, northern India for 11 years since 1984, but after spending money on fraud, he stepped into the dark and began to twist.

He was first sold to a fake gas cylinder, then moved to an illegal kidney transplant business where it was better to earn money and was arrested by the police in 2004.

He said he was involved in 125 kidney transplants and earned $68,680 to $9,350 per case ($8 to $11,114 million).

He also took a taxi in the state of Padesh, Uttar, North India, killed a taxi driver at a planned location, and sold the stolen taxi to earn $270 per unit.

The bodies were all thrown at the crocodiles and could not be found.

He said there were more than 50 taxi drivers who killed him.

(Photo = Indian media Hindu capture, Yonhap News)