Monday, June 29, 2026
ADVT 
International

US Probing Sikh Man Jagjeet Singh's Murder As Possible Hate Crime

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 May, 2017 12:00 AM
    Police in California are investigating the murder of a 32-year-old Sikh man as a possible "hate crime" after he refused to sell cigarettes to a man who did not have a proper ID.
     
    Jagjeet Singh, who was a clerk at the Hatch Food and Gas convenience store in California's Modesto city, had come to the US only 18 months ago from Punjab.
     
    Singh was stabbed to death last week after he apparently refused to sell cigarettes to his attacker as he did not have proper ID.
     
    Heather Graves, a Modesto Police Department spokeswoman, told NBC News that Singh and one of the suspects had had a confrontation inside the store.
     
    "We have a couple of different witnesses giving some information but that's still under investigation," she said. "We just know that there were words exchanged between the two of them."
     
     
    Asked whether the stabbing may have been a hate crime, Graves said, "That is a possibility and we are investigating that possibility as well."
     
    Police have released a surveillance picture of the man who got into an argument with Singh over the sale of cigarettes.
     
    The man left the business parking lot in a dark coloured vehicle and then returned with a second suspect who stabbed the victim.
     
    The preliminary findings suggest that Singh was securing the business after closing when he was approached by the suspect.
     
    The suspect, described as a Hispanic male stabbed Singh and then fled from the scene, according to a statement from the Modesto Police Department.
     
    Singh was the fourth Indian-origin victim of an alleged crime in the US in the last one week alone.
     
     
    Ramesh Kumar, 32, was found dead of gunshot wounds in the passenger seat of a car parked in a rest area 90 miles of Detroit.
     
    Indian-origin Naren Prabhu, a Silicon Valley technology executive and his wife, were shot at their home in San Jose by their daughter's ex-boyfriend who was eventually shot dead in a standoff with the police.
     
    Mirza Tatlic, 24, fatally shot the couple in an apparent revenge attack. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Why are so many good pianists from China?

    Why are so many good pianists from China?
    Gone are the days when music aficionados complained that pianists from the East played like machines - technical and clean, capable of being fast, but with no emotional spark and necessary musicality. Now Chinese pianists are among the world's best.

    Why are so many good pianists from China?

    'One-third of Britons have racist opinions'

    'One-third of Britons have racist opinions'
    A third of Britons have racist opinions, a study shows.

    'One-third of Britons have racist opinions'

    Indian national admits stealing trade secrets in US

    Indian national admits stealing trade secrets in US
    An Indian engineer in the US has admitted to stealing trade secrets from two medical technology companies, media reported Thursday.

    Indian national admits stealing trade secrets in US

    New Gurdwara faces opposition in US

    New Gurdwara faces opposition in US
    A Sikh temple in the US is facing local opposition because of plans to replace its existing prayer hall with a 12,000-sq-ft building with gold domes in a rural neighbourhood, media reported Monday.

    New Gurdwara faces opposition in US

    How will climate change affect livelihoods in South Asia?

    How will climate change affect livelihoods in South Asia?
    An initiative by Britain and Canada seeks to study and tackle the effects of climate change in South Asia, in tandem with TERI and Jadavpur University in India and similar institutes in neighbouring Pakistan and Bangladesh.

    How will climate change affect livelihoods in South Asia?

    Obama vows to work with Modi 'for years to come'

    Obama vows to work with Modi 'for years to come'
    The US Monday came full circle as after shunning Narendra Modi for over a decade, President Barack Obama Monday vowed to work closely together with the new Indian prime minister "for years to come".

    Obama vows to work with Modi 'for years to come'