On July 30, former Punjab Deputy IGP Harinder Singh Chahal stood near a newly-installed statue of Sidhu Moosewala—who was assassinated on May 29—alongside the slain singer’s father, Balkaur Singh, and addressed the mourners. As Chahal, who has been decorated with President’s Police Medal for Meritorious Services, mimicked a handgun and pulled the trigger, he touched upon the biggest unresolved murder mystery in Punjab’s music industry—the fatal shooting of Amar Singh Chamkila and his singer-wife Amarjot with two other members of their band, on March 8, 1988. “Those who had killed Chamkila, I killed them,” Chahal declared in Mansa’s Moosa village to a tepid response from the gathered crowd. Just a few days ago, Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann had congratulated the state police for killing two gangsters who were allegedly involved in Moosewala’s murder. Then too, the public response was of indifference, unlike the wild public celebrations after the encounter killings of criminal Vikas Dubey in Kanpur or after that of four alleged rapists in Hyderabad.