Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Sikhs Recognize Former Lieutenant Brian Murphy Of Oak Creek, Wisconsin Who Was Struck With 12 Bullets During Shooting At Gurudwara

Darpan News Desk, 10 Dec, 2019 08:29 PM

    On Thursday, the New Jersey State Association of Chiefs of Police (NJSACOP) featured Former Oak Creek Police Lieutenant Brian Murphy at their Mid-Year meeting.


    At the event, former Lt. Murphy was also recognized by members of the Sikh community for his service during the August 5, 2012 attack on the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin.


    Rucha Kaur, Community Development Director at the Sikh Coalition, and Raghuvinder Singh, member of the Oak Creek sangat, spoke at the event.


    Raghuvinder Singh is the son of Baba Punjab Singh, who was shot in the August 2012 assault; to this day, he lies in a hospital bed, unable to move or speak. Former Lt. Murphy was the first law enforcement officer on the scene in Oak Creek, where he was hit by 15 bullets as he engaged the shooter that was attacking the gurdwara.


    “We are grateful to Lieutenant Murphy for addressing our officers, and to the Sikh Coalition for joining us and facilitating Mr. Singh as a powerful speaker,” said Chief Christopher Leusner, President of NJSACOP and Chief of the Middle Township Police Department.


    “We know that cultural education and interpersonal interaction are key to helping all law enforcement officials better protect our diverse communities, and we thank the Sikh community for continuing to build bridges with their officers across the nation.”

    The Sikh community members in attendance honored former Lt. Murphy with a canvas by a Sikh artist as well as a book: Turbans and Tales, which depicts the portraits featured in the critically-acclaimed Sikh Project photography exhibition by British photographers Amit and Naroop.


    Former Lt. Murphy has been honored for his service before, including when then-Vice President Biden awarded him and fellow Oak Creek Police Officer Sam Lenda (who also responded to the gurdwara attack) with the Medal of Valor in 2015.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Bans Logging In Sensitive Border Area After Urging From Seattle Mayor

    B.C. Bans Logging In Sensitive Border Area After Urging From Seattle Mayor
    Forests Minister Doug Donaldson says B.C. will no longer award timber licences in a 5,800-hectare plot called the Silverdaisy or "doughnut hole" in the Skagit River Valley.

    B.C. Bans Logging In Sensitive Border Area After Urging From Seattle Mayor

    Annual Surrey Toy Drive Remembers Boy Who Wanted Every Sick Kid To Have A Christmas Gift

    The Surrey RCMP is hoping to make the holidays a little brighter for sick kids and their families by inviting the public to come out and support the annual Keian’s Holiday Wish Toy Drive.

    Annual Surrey Toy Drive Remembers Boy Who Wanted Every Sick Kid To Have A Christmas Gift

    Distracted Driving Simulator Targets North Vancouver Teens And Texting

    Today they were at Carson Graham Secondary School, where they also had on hand two sets of fatal vision goggle, which simulate the visual effects of impairme

    Distracted Driving Simulator Targets North Vancouver Teens And Texting

    Alberta RCMP Continue To Investigate Crash Between School Bus And Mobile Crane

    Alberta RCMP Continue To Investigate Crash Between School Bus And Mobile Crane
        The crash happened at 8:30 a.m. yesterday near Smoky Lake, which is about 115 kilometres northeast of Edmonton.

    Alberta RCMP Continue To Investigate Crash Between School Bus And Mobile Crane

    Canadian Organizations Distancing Themselves From Disgraced Royal

    A prominent member of the Royal Family has little ground left to lose in Canada even as he faces fresh scrutiny and public rebukes closer to home.    

    Canadian Organizations Distancing Themselves From Disgraced Royal

    Poem Gives Fresh Voice To African-canadian Pioneer Of Song And Stage, Portia White

    HALIFAX - As a boy, George Elliott Clarke browsed a family album and marvelled at the "shimmering career" of his great aunt Portia White, an African-Canadian woman who became an acclaimed classical singer in the 1940s.    

    Poem Gives Fresh Voice To African-canadian Pioneer Of Song And Stage, Portia White