Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Bollywood concert promoter convicted in US for brutal attack on ex-wife

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 May, 2014 01:50 PM
    An Indian-American Bollywood concert promoter in California has been convicted of aggravated mayhem for paying three men to maim his ex-wife last year, leaving her with permanent facial injuries.
     
    Rakesh Paul Singh, 55, of Milpitas, was also convicted of conspiracy to commit mayhem for the Feb 13, 2013, assault at his ex-wife's home in Fremont, San Jose Mercury News reported citing deputy district attorney Charles Wilson.
     
    An Alameda County Superior Court jury handed down its verdict on Tuesday after a trial, which lasted more than a month, beginning March 31. Sentencing is June 2.
     
    Singh, who jail records show also worked as a travel agent before his April 3, 2013, arrest, faces a minimum of seven years to life in state prison.
     
    Prosecutors said Singh wanted his ex-wife's face disfigured because he believed she was seeing another man and that he insisted the attack look like a robbery.
     
    Additionally, witnesses testified that Singh had orchestrated similar attacks on former business partners in the past in other jurisdictions.
     
    Wilson, who prosecuted the case, said Singh's wife was attacked with a hammer and a knife about 9 a.m. by two men as she attempted to get into her black Mercedes in the driveway of her Fremont home.
     
    As she screamed for help, the men continued to attack her, pummelling her with the mallet in the face and head. The men then ran off.
     
    The woman was treated at Regional Hospital of San Jose for cuts to her cheeks, neck and ears, which required stitches and caused permanent facial damage.
     
    Police eventually learned Singh paid 28-year-old Sunnyvale resident Ricardo Alejandro Rivera $500 to hire two men to deface her after she refused to reconcile their relationship.
     
    The couple divorced in January 2012 but had met on many occasions to discuss the relationship, records show.
     
    The three men who Singh hired to attack his ex-wife each previously pleaded no contest to one count of mayhem and one of them testified against Singh at trial, Mercury News said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    At last New York Police ends spying on Muslims

    At last New York Police ends spying on Muslims
     New York Police Department has disbanded a controversial surveillance unit started after the September 11, 2001, attacks to catalogue information on Muslim businesses and mosques across the New York region.

    At last New York Police ends spying on Muslims

    US Airways tweets explicit image, apologises

    US Airways tweets explicit image, apologises
    After facing embarrassment over posting a obscene pornographic image on Twitter in response to an unhappy customer Monday, US Airways finally apologised for the error later in the day.

    US Airways tweets explicit image, apologises

    Over 100 teenage girls abducted in Nigeria

    Over 100 teenage girls abducted in Nigeria
    More than 100 teenage girls were abducted Monday in northeastern Nigeria by suspected Boko Haram members, local sources and police said.

    Over 100 teenage girls abducted in Nigeria

    Ukraine crisis amplifies need for defense cooperation: NATO

    Ukraine crisis amplifies need for defense cooperation: NATO
    NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen Tuesday said that the Ukraine crisis has amplified the need to strengthen cooperation between NATO, the European Union and other partners.

    Ukraine crisis amplifies need for defense cooperation: NATO

    Miss America Nina Davuluri to join White House Easter Egg Roll

    Miss America Nina Davuluri to join White House Easter Egg Roll
    Nina Davuluri, the first Indian American and second Asian American to be chosen as Miss America, will be one of the readers on Storytime Stage at this year's White House Easter Egg Roll.

    Miss America Nina Davuluri to join White House Easter Egg Roll

    Afghan Drawdown: New conflict or back-door occupation?

    Afghan Drawdown: New conflict or back-door occupation?
    When, in mid-1945, the allied armies advancing across Western Europe were ordered to halt to enable the marauding Soviet forces perform the final denouement of the Second World War by capturing Berlin, it sowed the seeds of the Cold War that lasted almost half-a-century and whose present-day ramifications are there for all to see.

    Afghan Drawdown: New conflict or back-door occupation?