A new crime documentary series is about to pull back the curtain on some of India’s most disturbing marital murder cases. Honeymoon Se Hatya, streaming from January 9, examines five real cases where wives killed their husbands—starting with the infamous Meghalaya honeymoon murder that shocked the nation.
The Five Cases: What We Know
Episode 1: The Meghalaya Honeymoon Murder
The series opens with its most prominent case—the murder of Raja Raghuvanshi by his wife Sonam during their honeymoon in Meghalaya. This case became a national talking point when it first broke, with the honeymoon setting adding a particularly dark irony to the crime.
The Meghalaya case serves as the anchor for the entire series, setting the tone for how Honeymoon Se Hatya will approach its subject matter.

Episode 2: The Meerut Blue Drum Case
The Meerut blue drum case is one of those crimes that gripped public attention not just for its brutality but for the methodical planning it revealed. While details are being kept under wraps ahead of the premiere, this case is known for the shocking disposal method that gave it its name.

Episode 3: The Bhiwani Influencer Case
In an era where social media presents curated versions of perfect lives, the Bhiwani influencer case peels back that glossy surface. This episode will likely explore the disconnect between public personas and private realities—something particularly relevant to Indian audiences navigating the pressure to present picture-perfect marriages.

Episode 4: The Mumbai Nalasopara Tile Case
Mumbai’s Nalasopara tile case represents another methodical crime that shocked investigators. The series will examine what led to this particular breakdown and what warning signs, if any, were missed by those around the couple.

Episode 5: The Delhi Electric Shock Case
The Delhi electric shock case rounds out the series, bringing the focus to the capital and examining yet another angle on how marriages can deteriorate into violence.
Why This Series Matters Now
India is in the midst of a cultural reckoning around marriage, domestic violence, and women’s agency. Honeymoon Se Hatya arrives at a moment when these conversations are becoming less taboo, though they’re still far from comfortable.
The series promises to examine several critical themes:
Marital Pressures: The weight of family expectations, financial stress, and societal demands that can crush a relationship.
Power Dynamics: Who holds control in a marriage, how that control gets exercised, and what happens when power imbalances become toxic.
Hidden Conflicts: The private struggles that couples mask from the outside world—sometimes even from themselves—until they explode.
Systemic Issues: The broader social structures that trap people in bad marriages, from financial dependence to fear of social stigma around divorce.
What the January 9 Premiere Means for True-Crime Fans
For viewers who’ve exhausted Western true-crime content and want something rooted in Indian contexts, Honeymoon Se Hatya fills a gap. These are Indian cases, operating within Indian social structures, reflecting Indian marital dynamics.
The five-episode format suggests depth over breadth. Rather than skimming across dozens of cases, the series gives each one room to breathe, to show the complexity rather than reducing people to headlines.
The January 9 release also positions Honeymoon Se Hatya to be one of the year’s early conversation-starters, potentially setting the tone for how Indian OTT platforms approach true-crime content in 2026.

