Thursday, January 1, 2026
ADVT 
International

Search On For Missing Good Samaritan Indian Techie Knocked Into Brazos River By Texas Drunken Driver

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 May, 2015 12:35 AM
    US authorities continue to search for a good Samaritan Indian American techie who was helping a crash victim when an alleged drunk driver possibly sent him over a bridge and into a river in Texas.
     
    Puneet Nehra, 43, a resident of Sugarland suburb and originally from Noida, Uttar Pradesh, went missing after an accident shortly after 9 p.m. on Sunday on the Grand Parkway northbound on the Brazos river in Fort Bend county.
     
    Texas EquuSearch, the Fort Bend county sheriff's office and local fire departments are searching the river by boat and helicopter, Click2Houston.com reported.
     
    Tim Miller with Texas Equusearch said high water levels and debris in the water were making the search more difficult.
     
    "The Brazos river is unforgiving, down there where he went in, it goes anywhere from 25 to 48 feet," he was quoted as saying.
     
    Police believe that Nehra, who had stopped to assist with an accident on the bridge may have gone over the bridge and into the river when an intoxicated driver crashed into the original scene, the news site said.
     
    "We didn't realise that it had happened until it was time to clear the scene and we had one more vehicle than we had drivers, and that's when the deputies had to reassess what happened and figure out where he might be," Maj. Chad Norvell, with the Fort Bend County Sheriff's Office was quoted as saying.
     
    A family friend told KPRC 2 News that Nehra was on his way back home after picking up dinner for his family when he encountered the crash.
     
    Investigators said the suspected drunk driver, Gregory Kure, of Needville, was arrested. Kure, 30, is charged with driving under the influence.
     
    "If you can envision a sweet and pure soul, willing to help anyone in need, who would open his heart to anyone he saw, that's Mr. Nehra," a close family friend Anjali Bakshi-Rami told the news site.
     
    Nehra's wife and two young children are having a difficult time with this, hoping and praying for the best and asking anyone with information about what happened at the crash site to contact the police, she said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    British girl gets jail for attacking elderly Sikh man

    British girl gets jail for attacking elderly Sikh man
    The British teenaged girl who attacked an 80-year-old Sikh pensioner in a city centre in Britain's Coventry last year has been jailed for two years by the Warwick crown court.

    British girl gets jail for attacking elderly Sikh man

    Modi attacks Sonia Gandhi over 'low thought' barb

    Modi attacks Sonia Gandhi over 'low thought' barb
    Taking on Congress president Sonia Gandhi for calling him a person of "low thought", BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi Friday accused her of "stooping low" due to impending defeat in the general elections.

    Modi attacks Sonia Gandhi over 'low thought' barb

    Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Plaza coming up in Texas

    Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Plaza coming up in Texas
    A seven-foot tall bronze statue of India's freedom movement leader will be the centrepiece of the Mahatma Gandhi Memorial of North Texas with walls inscribed with some of his quotes.

    Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Plaza coming up in Texas

    Ancient Buddha statues found in China

    Ancient Buddha statues found in China
    Over 1,000 ancient Buddha statues have been found in China, a cultural relics protection department official said Friday.

    Ancient Buddha statues found in China

    Half of British teenagers are internet addicts

    Half of British teenagers are internet addicts
    Is your 15-year-old child hooked to internet most of the time, especially in the early hours? He belongs to a growing breed of such teenagers across the globe.

    Half of British teenagers are internet addicts

    Arguments in social circle may double your death risk: Study

    Arguments in social circle may double your death risk: Study
    Do you often fight with partners, relatives and friends on trivial matters? Stop this immediately as frequent arguments in family or in neighbourhood may double the risk of death from any cause in middle age.

    Arguments in social circle may double your death risk: Study