Widow of techie shot dead in US seeks answers
DO WE BELONG? Asks at memorial service for Kuchibhotla how Trump administration proposes to ensure expats’ safety
Aviations engineer Srinivas Kuchibhotla’s widow Sunayana Dumala may have spoken for every Indian in the US and, in fact, every immigrant in the politically charged atmosphere of the country, when she said on Friday: “I have a question in my mind: Do we belong?”
Adam Purinton, a 51-year-old US Navy veteran who might have been too drunk to know his mind or woefully uninformed to make a considered choice, sought to settle that question for Dumala, fatally shooting her husband in cold blood on Wednesday and wounding his colleague, mistaking them for Middle Easterners. He shot and wounded another white man who tried to intervene.
Authorities are investigating the killing as a possible hate crime.
Addressing a news conference at Garmin, where Kuchibhotla had worked, Dumala said she planned to return to the US after the funeral in India. Before that, she added, “I need an answer…I need an answer from the government...What are they going to do
Do we belong... I need an answer from the government... What are they going to do to stop this hate crime
to stop this hate crime?”
But the White House dismissed any suggestion US President Donald Trump’s rhetoric could have led to the killing, as has been suggested by some. “Any loss of life is tragic,” said press secretary Sean Spicer on Friday. “But I’m not going to get into, like, that kind of - to suggest that there’s any correlation (to