Latest News

Indian man pleads guilty in New York to plotting the murder of Sikh separatist

A man from India pleaded guilty to U.S. criminal charges on Friday, pleading guilty to orchestrating a failed?plot? to kill a Sikh Separatist in New York City. This was in connection with a larger effort by U.S. authorities and Canadian authorities to target Indian dissidents. Nikhil Gupta pleaded guilty on Friday to charges of murder for hire, conspiracy to murder for hire, and conspiracy to launder money. According to federal guidelines for sentencing, he could be facing up to 24 years of prison. Gupta was accused by prosecutors of conspiring with an Indian official to 'kill Gurpatwant Sing Pannun. He is a dual U.S./Canadian citizen, lawyer for Sikhs for Justice, and advocate for a sovereign 'Sikh state? in northern India. India has denied any involvement in the plot to kill Pannun. The government said it was against its policy. India's relations have been tested by the discovery of alleged plots to assassinate Sikh separatists from Canada and the United States. India has denied any involvement.

DEFENDANT SAYS THAT HE AGREED ON MURDER PLAN

Gupta entered his plea in front of U.S. Magistrate Sarah Netburn at the Manhattan federal court. Gupta admitted that he had agreed with someone else to have another individual murder (sic), a person in the United States, and paid a New Yorker $15,000 for this crime. Gupta, who was arrested in the Czech Republic a year before and extradited to Brooklyn in June 2024, has been in jail in Brooklyn ever since he initially pleaded not guilty. According to court records, his sentencing will take place on May 29. Gupta's lawyers did not respond immediately to comments. The Indian Embassy in Washington, D.C., didn't immediately respond to requests for comments.

UNDERCOVER OFFICER POSED AS HITMAN According to prosecutors, an Indian official, Vikash Yadav recruited Gupta, in May 2023, to plan Pannun's murder. Gupta told Yadav of his involvement with international drug and weapon trafficking. Court papers state that Yadav had arranged for Gupta to facilitate the payment of $100,000 to a purported hitman who was an undercover agent working with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to assassinate Pannun. Court papers reveal that Gupta arranged for $15,000 to be delivered in cash to the undercover agent as a 'advance' payment. Yadav, according to prosecutors, was employed by India’s Cabinet Secretariat which houses the country’s foreign intelligence service (the Research and Analysis Wing). He is facing the same charges as Gupta but is not under U.S. custody. Uncertain is whether Yadav has retained a lawyer. Jay Clayton, the U.S. attorney for Manhattan, stated that "Nikhil Gupta" plotted to assassinate an American citizen in New York City. "He believed that he could assassinate someone without consequences, just for exercising his right to free expression in the United States. He was wrong. (Reporting and editing by David Holmes, Noeleen Walder, Daniel Wallis; New York)

(source: Reuters)