INDIA, July 17, 2011: The man who led a legal battle which led to the recent discovery of treasure worth billions of dollars in an Indian temple has died at the age of 70. T.P. Sundara Rajan, a retired police officer, petitioned for the vaults of the 16th Century Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple in Kerala to be opened. Inside, investigators found gold and silver jewelry and precious stones which had been hidden for decades.
The family of Mr. Sundara Rajan said he died after a brief illness. “The strain of the past few weeks proved too much for him to bear,” a family friend was quoted as saying by India Today.
Local legend had long held that vast riches had been interred in the walls and vaults of the temple by the Maharajahs of Travancore over many years. Rajan went to the Supreme Court asking that the state take over control of the temple, saying the current temple trust were incapable of protecting the wealth inside.
Neither the state of Kerala nor the descendants of the Travancore royal family have made any claim on the treasure, which they say is the property of the temple and its Deity.