Indian-American booked for plotting to burn down a California gurdwara

A former Bakersfield city council candidate, Rajvir “Raj” Singh Gill, 60, was arrested last weekend on suspicion of trying to hire goons to burn down and carry out a shooting spree at one of the largest Gurdwaras in the area, Gurdwara Shaheed Baba Deep Singh Ji Khalsa Darbar, bakersfield.com reported.
Gill, who was under a temporary restraining order not to harass the gurdwara members, was taken into custody on Saturday on six counts of solicitation to commit a criminal act, according to the police of Bakersfield in Kern County, California. Records, however, show that Gill has since been released from jail.
Gill had won less than 7 per cent of the vote in November’s Ward 7 election. According to a Gurdwara elder, Sukhwinder Singh Ranghi, Gill has in recent months shown up at the property, disrupting prayers and threatening members of the congregation, carrying a gun, before being arrested at one point. There are no records of his arrest prior to Saturday.
According to Ranghi, the repeated confrontations were due to a dispute over more than USD 800,000, contributed by members of the congregation, that was supposed to reimburse a corporate entity set up to buy the gurdwara out of foreclosure in July 2020, bakersfield.com reported.
“It’s the greed that most likely got to him,” Ranghi said through a translator.
Bakersfield.com, couldn’t reach Gill for a comment.
Manpreet Kaur, a city councilwoman, who won last fall’s election, said she knew of the restraining order against Gill but was unaware of the conflict’s details. She called the allegations against him unfathomable.
“It’s really heartbreaking. It is. It’s frightening and I’m just hoping the community stays safe,” she said, as quoted by bakersfield.com
A Bakersfield Police Department spokesman declined to address what may be the reason behind Gill’s actions. The officer didn’t elaborate on the case. 

According to the Sikh elder, Ranghi, Gill offered $10,000 to two Hispanic men to kill certain leaders of the congregation who are involved in the court cases, including Ranghi. He said Gill drove the men around the city pointing out the homes of the temple leaders he wanted to be killed. This information came to temple leadership from an associate of the intended hit men, bakersfield.com reported. 

Ranghi alleged that Gill had instructed the men on how they could burn down the temple by exploiting faulty electrical wiring, installed by his own workers when the temple was built more than a decade ago. 

Ranghi showed part of a video he said captured Gill unplugging microphones still in use during a religious service at the temple. 

Gurudwara Shaheed Baba Deep Singh Ji Khalsa Darbar is one of Bakersfield’s best-attended, with more than 500 members. It hosts an annual celebration in late October that draws thousands. 

Image courtesy of thesatimes

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