Anjali Sharma
GG News Bureau
NEW YORK, 20th Feb. According to local news media reports on Monday an Indian-origin man was arrested and charged with extortion threats targeted South Asian businesses in Canada, has claimed his innocence, and stated that police have wrongly portrayed him as a high-level gangster.
Arundeep Thind, 39, was among 5 people of Punjab origin who were arrested announced by Peel Regional Police’s extortion taskforce on February 8 in connection with a laundry list of offences, including extortion, possession of firearms and fraud.
Thind, charged with one count of extortion relating to an alleged incident on January 26, is out on bail after spending two weeks in jail, and told Canadian media that he is not a “criminal”.
Thind a music producer told CTV news that “I have family too. I have kids too. My kids are crying, ‘Daddy’s not a criminal.’ You guys (the media and police) showed (my photo) that I’m a criminal. I’m not.”
Thind told the news outlet that he has never been involved in organised crime and extortion.
He asserted that he is a “victim” of these threats.
Thind said days before his arrest, his friend a restaurant owner in Brampton who was targeted by the extortionists gave Thind the phone number and asked him to call the people harassing him.
He spoke to the person on the phone who coerced him into going to a car dealership to request an extortion payment on their behalf, Thind told CTV news.
Thind simply handed a phone over to the owner of the car company at the dealership.
“I told them, ‘I want nothing more to do with this. You guys speak to each other and leave me out of it,’” he said.
It was then that the police arrived and arrested him, Thind said.
On being asked why he posted a series of photos and videos on his social media holding a gun, Thind told the channel that the picture was taken years ago while filming a music video and that “the gun wasn’t even real”.
He said that he has never been a part of organized crime or extortion in the country, he admitted to a domestic incident charge
Thind believes police are wrongly accused him as a “high-level gangster”, and are using his mug shot.
He said that he has not met and is not connected to four other people charged by Peel Police, namely Gagan Ajit Singh, Anmoldeep Singh, Hashmeet Kaur and Lymanjot Kaur.
Brampton City Councilor Gurpartap Singh Toor told CTV that Thind’s release isn’t sitting well with his community and he is yet to be tried in a court of law.
Peel Regional Police Chief Nishan Duraiappah had said in a statement that “there’s a complex ecosystem of people involved” in these crimes.
PRP’s taskforce said 29 cases of extortion are under investigation and of these, nine incidents have involved shootings at local businesses, with multiple bullets being fired.
The businesses being targeted are South Asian-owned restaurants, bakeries, trucking and transport companies, independent used car dealerships, and jewelry stores.
Police said the victims are contacted via phone or social media and threatened to pay in cash or transfer money either in Indian or Canadian currency.