A Family's Alarming Claim: NYPD Officers Shot Son Without Calling EMS First, Advocacy Group Alleges
In a shocking turn of events, the family of 22-year-old Jabez Chakraborty, who was shot at least four times by NYPD officers in Queens on Monday, claims that they specifically requested an EMS response when calling 911. According to Desis Rising Up and Moving, a South Asian immigrant advocacy group, Simran Thind, a close family member, stated that the family asked for medical transport, not police.
However, the NYPD disputes this account, saying that officers were invited into the home by the family and did not draw their guns until Chakraborty grabbed a knife. The FDNY confirms that an EMS response was sent to the scene, but only after it was determined to be a mental health emergency.
The family's claim raises questions about the handling of the incident and whether the NYPD's actions were justified. Thind described the scene as chaotic, saying "There's no reason for that... That is something that is so irrelevant to what has happened." However, the NYPD maintains that there was no evidence of immigration-related questioning by officers.
The shooting bears eerie similarities to a 2024 incident in which Win Rozario, also from the Bangladeshi Christian community, was killed by NYPD officers responding to a mental health call. The state attorney general's office declined to prosecute the officers involved in Rozario's death, but the Civilian Complaint Review Board has recommended misconduct charges against them.
The family of Jabez Chakraborty is now left grappling with the trauma of the incident and fears that their loved one may never fully recover. "She was worried that the same way that Win was killed, that her son was about to be killed by the police," Thind said of Juli Chakraborty, Jabez's mother. The NYPD must explain its actions on Monday, but for now, questions remain unanswered.
In a shocking turn of events, the family of 22-year-old Jabez Chakraborty, who was shot at least four times by NYPD officers in Queens on Monday, claims that they specifically requested an EMS response when calling 911. According to Desis Rising Up and Moving, a South Asian immigrant advocacy group, Simran Thind, a close family member, stated that the family asked for medical transport, not police.
However, the NYPD disputes this account, saying that officers were invited into the home by the family and did not draw their guns until Chakraborty grabbed a knife. The FDNY confirms that an EMS response was sent to the scene, but only after it was determined to be a mental health emergency.
The family's claim raises questions about the handling of the incident and whether the NYPD's actions were justified. Thind described the scene as chaotic, saying "There's no reason for that... That is something that is so irrelevant to what has happened." However, the NYPD maintains that there was no evidence of immigration-related questioning by officers.
The shooting bears eerie similarities to a 2024 incident in which Win Rozario, also from the Bangladeshi Christian community, was killed by NYPD officers responding to a mental health call. The state attorney general's office declined to prosecute the officers involved in Rozario's death, but the Civilian Complaint Review Board has recommended misconduct charges against them.
The family of Jabez Chakraborty is now left grappling with the trauma of the incident and fears that their loved one may never fully recover. "She was worried that the same way that Win was killed, that her son was about to be killed by the police," Thind said of Juli Chakraborty, Jabez's mother. The NYPD must explain its actions on Monday, but for now, questions remain unanswered.