Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
International

A person in custody after truck belonging to uncle in California kidnapping of Indian family found on fire

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Oct, 2022 01:03 PM
  • A person in custody after truck belonging to uncle in California kidnapping of Indian family found on fire

Mystery deepened in the case of a kidnapped Indian-origin family in California as officials reported that a person was taken into custody in connection with the case after he attempted suicide and the truck belonging to one of the victims was found burning.

But still missing is the kidnapped family - eight-month-old baby Aroohi Dheri, her parents, Jasleen Kaur, 27, and Jasdeep Singh, 36, and uncle, Amandeep Singh, 39.

A 48-year-old man was held "as a person of interest" on Tuesday and is in a "critical condition" at a hospital after the suicide attempt, the Merced County Sheriff's Office said.

Amandeep Singh's wife, Jaspreet Kaur, made an appeal on TV for the victims' release: "I am begging in front of the people who took my family away, please, please let them go."

"My niece, she's just an 8-month-old kid and she doesn't have any food with them," she said.

Merced County is about 225 kilometres southeast of San Francisco.

Detailing the kidnapping, the Sheriff's office said that they were alerted to the kidnapping on Monday when a truck belonging to Amandeep Singh was found burning on a highway.

When officers were unable to contact him, they reached out to a family member.

Family members reported the four missing after they couldn't contact them either and officers were directed to a business, Unison Trucking, to investigate, according to the Sheriff's office.

Detectives then determined that the four had been kidnapped, it said.

Jaspreet Kaur told KTLA TV that her husband had gone to work that day at 8 a.m. and she got a call at about 11 a.m. that there was no one at the business's front desk and when she tried calling him, the calls went to voicemail.

The person in custody was identified by the Sheriff's office as Jesus Manuel Salgado who was picked up after it received information about him.

But before law enforcement officers became involved, he had attempted to take his own life, the Sheriff's office said.

It said that a bank reported that a bank card belonging to one of the victims had been used at an ATM machine and officers got a picture of the person using it.

"The person is similar in appearance to the surveillance photo from the original kidnapping scene", the sheriff's office said.

But it said that the person in the ATM photo "was not the person of interest that is in custody" and it was working with the bank "to obtain the correct photo".

When someone is held "as a person of interest", it usually means that the person could be a potential suspect but officials do not have sufficient information to file charges.

ABC30 TV station in Fresno reported that Salgado had earlier been involved in a robbery in 2005.

The station said that Merced County prosecutor's office he was charged with home invasion robbery with a gun, witness intimidation and attempted false imprisonment in that case.

He was imprisoned and released in 2015, ABC 30 said.

The station quoted Sheriff Vernon Warnke as saying, "We are hoping he recovers because right now, he is our only lead to the family. We still have no leads on where the family is, what their condition is."

MORE International ARTICLES

Tulsa police: 3 killed in shooting at a medical building

Tulsa police: 3 killed in shooting at a medical building
Three people were killed Wednesday in a shooting at a Tulsa medical building on a hospital campus, a police captain said. Capt. Richard Meulenberg confirmed the number of dead. Meulenberg said the shooter also was dead.

Tulsa police: 3 killed in shooting at a medical building

Indian origin British police officer could sue UK govt

Indian origin British police officer could sue UK govt
Matthew Rycroft, the senior-most civil servant at the Home Office, reportedly informed him that he and another officer who had been short-listed for the job that they would not be selected. He is not known to have spelled out a reason for the decision.

Indian origin British police officer could sue UK govt

All passengers including four Indians confirmed dead in Nepal plane crash

All passengers including four Indians confirmed dead in Nepal plane crash
Soon after the aircraft went out of contact, the Nepal Army deployed its personnel in the Lete area for search. The plane was carrying 13 Nepalese, four Indians, and two Germans.

All passengers including four Indians confirmed dead in Nepal plane crash

WHO: Monkeypox won't turn into pandemic, but many unknowns

WHO: Monkeypox won't turn into pandemic, but many unknowns
In a public session on Monday, WHO's Dr. Rosamund Lewis said it was critical to emphasize that the vast majority of cases being seen in dozens of countries globally are in gay, bisexual or men who have sex with men, so that scientists can further study the issue and for those at risk to be careful.    

WHO: Monkeypox won't turn into pandemic, but many unknowns

'The wrong decision': officials admit Uvalde error

'The wrong decision': officials admit Uvalde error
The incident commander who was on scene during the 45 minutes it took for tactical officers to storm a bullet-strewn classroom in Uvalde, Tex., on Tuesday made the "wrong decision" to wait, the head of the state's Department of Public Safety acknowledged.

'The wrong decision': officials admit Uvalde error

Police detail initial moments of Texas shooting

Police detail initial moments of Texas shooting
The gunman entered the school at about 11:40 a.m. local time through an apparently unlocked door, and contrary to initial reports, encountered no resistance, Escalon said — the armed school safety officer, normally a fixture at educational facilities around the U.S., was not there. 

Police detail initial moments of Texas shooting