Between these two incidents, there was another case that raised serious question about the commitment of the Twin City police to fairness and evenhandedness. Sunil Mishra, a DGM in a private bank in the city, befriended a woman, a lecturer in a private college in the city, on dating app Tinde. After an introductory meeting at a café, the man invited the woman to his apartment, where the two apparently boozed and had sex. But the next morning, while going to drop the lady at a hospital as per her request, the man was waylaid by five youth who robbed him of Rs. 30, 000 and mobile phone and demanded Rs 5 lakh, threatening to make public a video of his sex with the woman. Convinced that the woman was in league with the youth, the man filed a complaint in the police. But soon after, the lady too filed a rape case against the banker. Police arrested both the man and three of the youth but let the woman free. The bank officer, in contrast, was sent to jail after being produced in the court. On Thursday, the man’s mother and members of a woman’s organisation sat on a dharna in front of the Chandrasekharpur police station all day and even attempted to self-immolate demanding the arrest of the lady lecturer. “When the two had consensual sex, why was my son arrested while the woman was let off,” asked the distraught mother.