Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Submit Guest Post

Sikh student stabbed to death in Washington

A 22-year-old Sikh software engineering student has been stabbed to death in his taxi allegedly by an American student who was upset over not getting admission into a university, media reports said.

Gagandeep Singh, a third year student who was also working as a taxi driver, was allegedly attacked by the 19- year-old passenger he had picked up at Spokane International Airport in Washington State on August 28, NBC affiliate KHQ reported.


The Bonner County Sheriff's Office in Idaho identified the defendant as Jacob Coleman, who was charged with first- degree murder in the death of Singh.

Coleman is said to have flown from Seattle to Spokane to start as a new student at Gonzaga University in Spokane, but upon arrival he was denied entry, according to a statement from the sheriffs office.

But "he became angry and began to have homicidal thoughts," police said, after claiming he was denied entry to Gonzaga University, a private Catholic school in Spokane.

The university said it "has no record of an application" from Coleman and that it was cooperating with law enforcement, the report said.

Coleman reportedly left, hailed a taxi and asked Singh to drive him to a fictitious friend's house in Bonner County, Idaho.

Coleman later admitted that during the journey he "became homicidal" and bought a knife during a stop at a shop, police said.

Singh later stopped his car in the city of Kootenai after realising he had been sent to an erroneous location. That's when Singh was stabbed multiple times with the knife Coleman allegedly bought at the store, according to the sheriff's office and a criminal complaint.

Singh, originally from Jalandhar in Punjab, had been living in Washington state since 2003.

"He was talking to my mom, he was a little nervous," his older brother Balgit Singh said on Tuesday. They had spoken over the phone.

"That was the last call from our family. So my moms like well, if he already paid you just drop him off another ten miles."

He said they lost contact with him soon afterwards and called 911, KREM2.com reported.

There have been a number of attacks targeting Indian- Americans and Sikhs in the recent months in the US.

In July, two Sikh Americans were killed in two separate incidents in one week in California.

In March, a 39-year-old Sikh man was shot in the arm outside his home in Kent, Washington, by a partially-masked gunman who shouted "go back to your own country".

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

Online gambling
India’s Gambling Evolution: From Casino Excitement to Online Gaming Growth
iStock

Online gamblers spending £1,000 a day to face new UK checks

  • Gamblers spending more than £1,000 in 24 hours could face financial risk assessments.
  • Regulator says the checks are not affordability tests and will not affect credit scores.
  • Betting industry warns the changes could push customers towards illegal gambling sites.

Online gambling customers in the UK who spend large sums in a short period could soon face financial risk assessments, under new rules announced by the Gambling Commission. The regulator says the changes are aimed at identifying customers who may be experiencing financial hardship, while the betting industry argues they could drive gamblers towards unregulated operators.

Under the new framework, customers spending more than £1,000 within a 24-hour period or £3,000 over a rolling 90-day period will be eligible for enhanced financial risk assessments. Lower thresholds will apply to gamblers aged under 25, with checks beginning at £750 in 24 hours once the system is fully introduced.

Keep ReadingShow less