Tuesday, May 21, 2024
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

At least 41 structures destroyed in California's largest wildfire of 2022

At least 41 structures destroyed in California's largest wildfire of 2022
The fast-moving wildfire that began on Friday afternoon near the Yosemite National Park in central California's Mariposa County scorched 18,087 acre (73.2 square km) with 26 per cent containment as of Tuesday morning, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire). 

At least 41 structures destroyed in California's largest wildfire of 2022

German strike forces Lufthansa to cancel hundreds of flights

German strike forces Lufthansa to cancel hundreds of flights
Lufthansa said that 92,000 passengers will be affected by the Frankfurt cancellations and 42,000 by the Munich disruption. It said those affected will be contacted Tuesday and rebooked on alternative flights where possible but warned that “the capacities available for this are very limited.”

German strike forces Lufthansa to cancel hundreds of flights

Doctors urge vaccination after U.S. polio case

Doctors urge vaccination after U.S. polio case
Health Canada has not recorded a case of the virus in more than 25 years, but infectious disease experts say they always have their "ears up and eyes open for vaccine-preventable illnesses like polio" that continue to circulate elsewhere in the world.

Doctors urge vaccination after U.S. polio case

2 Indian brothers, 1 Indian-American charged with crypto insider trading scheme in US

2 Indian brothers, 1 Indian-American charged with crypto insider trading scheme in US
Ishan Wahi, 32, a former product manager at Coinbase Global, stayed in Seattle, Washington, along with his brother Nikhil Wahi, 26. They committed the cryptocurrency crime with Indian-American Sameer Ramani, 33, of Houston, the US Department of Justice said in a statement late on Thursday.

2 Indian brothers, 1 Indian-American charged with crypto insider trading scheme in US

Joe Biden tests positive for Covid-19, has mild symptoms

Joe Biden tests positive for Covid-19, has mild symptoms
The White House said Biden will work from self-isolation over phone and on Zoom till he tests negative, which could take seven to eight days. Jill Biden, the First Lady, has tested negative. She told reporters that she spoke with her husband in the morning and he is feeling fine. For herself, she said she intends to stay with her schedule.

Joe Biden tests positive for Covid-19, has mild symptoms

WHO again considers declaring monkeypox a global emergency

WHO again considers declaring monkeypox a global emergency
African officials say they are already treating the continent's epidemic as an emergency. But experts elsewhere say the mild version of monkeypox in Europe, North America and beyond makes an emergency declaration unnecessary even if the virus can't be stopped. British officials recently downgraded their assessment of the disease, given its lack of severity.

WHO again considers declaring monkeypox a global emergency