Guyanese, Balkumar Singh was arrested in Trinidad after 16 years on the run, apologized August 17 as he was led into a Long Island courthouse. He is accused of being the perpetrator in the fatal shooting of a man outside a suburban New York wedding.
“I’m sorry for the pain I caused the family,” Singh told reporters before his arraignment in Nassau County court. Singh, 37, pleaded not guilty to murder, assault, weapons and other charges and was ordered to be held without bail.
He was not represented by an attorney; a judge said a court-appointed attorney would represent him at his next court appearance.
Prosecutors say Singh got into an argument while attending a June 1999 wedding in Hicksville. They say Singh fired numerous times outside the wedding hall, killing 19-year-old Abzal Khan.
Court documents indicate the assault charges involve the wounding of a second man.
A New York Times article at the time of the shooting said police believed the gunman had asked a girl to dance and argued with her date. Later, the gunman was waiting outside, and, as the wedding guests left the party, he opened fire.
The two men who were shot apparently had not been involved in the argument inside, police said. Khan, 19, of Queens, died of chest wounds. The second man was shot in the leg.
Singh was featured on “America’s Most Wanted” in 2009.
Acting District Attorney Madeline Singas said Singh used numerous aliases while on the run and might have spent time in Canada and Guyana. She said he was arrested in Trinidad in March after authorities were tipped off to his whereabouts; he apparently was homeless and living on the streets.
Khan’s parents and a brother attended the brief court proceeding.
“I’m very sad,” said Khan’s mother, Sharifan Khan, who shed tears as she spoke to reporters on her way into the courthouse. “I’m very, very, very sad. I can’t explain. My son was a very pious child. He always went to mosque; he always cleaned the mosque… He was so good.”
After the arraignment, Khan’s father, Ishanallie Khan, said he would not accept Singh’s apology.
“No, that doesn’t mean nothing to me,” he said.
According to an article in Newsday that cited Interpol, the international police agency, Singh is a Guyanese-born U.S. citizen who was wanted in the United States on a slew of charges, including second-degree murder, assault, reckless endangerment, criminal possession of a weapon and evidence tampering.