Georgia Indian American Police Officer Wounded in Shooting
Police officer Paramhans Desai. (photo via IANS)
An Indian American police officer has been critically wounded after he was shot by a man while responding to a domestic dispute, officials said.
Paramhans Desai, 38, was shot when he arrived at a house in McDonough in Georgia on the evening of Nov. 4 as he tried to make an arrest, local county Sheriff Reginald Scandrett said at a news conference.
The attacker pulled away and drew a handgun and shot Desai before fleeing in a car, Scandrett said.
Legendary basketball player Shaquille O’Neal, who lives in the town, has offered a reward of $5,000 for the arrest and conviction of the man who shot the officer. In addition, law enforcement agencies are offering rewards totaling $25,000.
Police identified the alleged attacker as Jordan Jackson.
“Jackson, whichever hole you are in, I assure you, we will come to find you, we will place you in custody and we will bring you justice immediately,” Scandrett said at a news conference.
Police identified Desai only on Nov. 6 as the officer who was shot and said that he was in a critical condition.
Fox 5 TV in Atlanta said that he had been in law enforcement for 17 years, working for the Georgia State Department of Corrections and DeKalb County Police before joining last year the Henry County police force, which has jurisdiction over McDonough, about 50 km from Atlanta.
Police said that he is married with two small children.
Following the killing of an African American in Minneapolis last year, the Black Lives Movement spawned calls backed by some Democrats on the party’s left to abolish police or cut law enforcement budgets.
The move to abolish the police department and replace it with a “Public Safety Department” was defeated in a referendum in Minneapolis, while candidates with strong law and order credentials even in the Democratic Party like New York mayoral candidate former Police Captain Eric Adams won elections, and candidates, almost all Democrats, who were seen as lenient on crime lost.
In the past year, there has been a dramatic increase in violent crimes nationwide with murders recording a 29 percent jump to reach 27,570, as police show restraint lest they be targeted.
Police did not appear to have returned fire when Desai was shot.
The suspect in the shooting of Desai appeared to be a non-White minority person in his photo circulated by police.