Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
International

Firm Where Murdered Kansas Victim Worked Offers Help To His Widow

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Feb, 2017 12:54 PM
    US firm Garmin, where murdered Indian engineer Srinivas Kuchibhotla was employed, has pledged to ensure that his wife is able to return to the US after she travels to India for her husband's last rites. 
     
    Sunayana Dumala expressed concern after her 32-year-old husband's shooting death at a Kansas bar, that her travel visa would become invalid, making her ineligible to continue living in the United States.
     
    "Garmin has to make sure that I can come back to this country at my will and pursue his dreams of me being successful in any field that I choose," Ms Dumala said during a press conference.
     
    Company officials said that Kuchibhotla had a work permit or a H-1B visa and that Dumala had an H4 visa. He is the main holder of the visa, which allowed his wife to live and work in the United States.
     
    "My husband came to the United States with lots of dreams. We made Kansas our home, we made Olathe our home," Ms Dumala said.
     
    Garmin's in-house legal counsels as well as their immigration counsel are working on Ms Dumala's travel arrangements. Several local law firms, including Bryan Cave, have come forward to offer free legal assistance, said Laurie Minard, Garmin's vice president of human resources.
     
    The law firm also works to ensure that spouses of Garmin's employees have access to various resources and are able to connect with people in their community.
     
     
    Garmin had sponsored Mr Kuchibhotla as well as other employees from India, Asia and other countries throughout their tenure with the company.
     
    "That is why she was very concerned with him not being here and if she left would she be able to come back," Mr Minard said.
     
    "We have assured her that we will help her with that," he added.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Toronto Mayor To Introduce Road Toll Plan For Two Highways

    Toronto Mayor To Introduce Road Toll Plan For Two Highways
    TORONTO — The mayor of Canada's largest city says he wants to impose a toll of roughly $2 on two major highways leading to Toronto's downtown core.

    Toronto Mayor To Introduce Road Toll Plan For Two Highways

    Canadian Accused In Death Countryman In Mexico Jailed As 'Precaution'

    Canadian Accused In Death Countryman In Mexico Jailed As 'Precaution'
    A Mexican judge has ordered a Canadian man who was arrested for the killing of a fellow countryman to be locked up for nine months as a "precautionary measure" while authorities investigate the death.

    Canadian Accused In Death Countryman In Mexico Jailed As 'Precaution'

    2 Indians Killed, 4 Injured In Road Accident In Oman

    2 Indians Killed, 4 Injured In Road Accident In Oman
    Two Indians have been killed and four others, including three children, injured when the car they were travelling in collided head-on with a vehicle in Oman, a media report said today.

    2 Indians Killed, 4 Injured In Road Accident In Oman

    Jail For Speeding Pakistani Driver Who Killed Indian-Origin Sikh Man In UK

    Jail For Speeding Pakistani Driver Who Killed Indian-Origin Sikh Man In UK
    Usman Anwar, believed to be of Pakistani origin, was sentenced to four years and eight months at the Old Bailey court in London yesterday for running over 55-year-old Parmjit Singh Karir 

    Jail For Speeding Pakistani Driver Who Killed Indian-Origin Sikh Man In UK

    Nikki Haley's Appointment Sign Of Indian Americans' Political Emergence

    Nikki Haley's historic appointment to a cabinet-rank post by Republican President-elect Donald Trump that caps the election of five Indian Americans to Congress this year has been welcomed by the community as a sign of its political emergence.

    Nikki Haley's Appointment Sign Of Indian Americans' Political Emergence

    Pakistan PM, Military Chiefs Vow To Teach India A 'Lesson'

    Pakistan PM, Military Chiefs Vow To Teach India A 'Lesson'
    Pakistan on Thursday stepped up its anti-India rant with the military chiefs, including outgoing Army chief General Raheel Sharif, threatening that the armed forces were capable of teaching India "a lesson" if the border tension escalates.

    Pakistan PM, Military Chiefs Vow To Teach India A 'Lesson'