Lawmakers join Sikh community in marking 5 years since deadly Indianapolis FedEx shootingLawmakers join Sikh community in marking 5 years since deadly Indianapolis FedEx shooting
via Rep. Pramila Jayapal, WTHR 13 News / YouTube

Lawmakers join Sikh community in marking 5 years since deadly Indianapolis FedEx shooting

Members of Congress have introduced a resolution commemorating the five-year anniversary of the mass shooting at an Indianapolis FedEx facility that killed eight people, including four members of the Sikh community.

The violence

A 19-year-old former FedEx employee opened fire at a FedEx Ground facility in Indianapolis on April 15, 2021, where nearly nine in 10 workers were of Sikh descent. Eight employees were killed and five others injured before the gunman died by suicide. The victims were Matthew Alexander, Samaria Blackwell, Amarjeet Johal, Jasvinder Kaur, Amarjit Sekhon, Jaswinder Singh, Karli Smith and John Weisert.
Local and federal investigators did not classify the shooting as a hate crime. The FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit ultimately concluded that the shooting was “an act of suicidal murder” not motivated by bias.

Honoring their memory

U.S. Reps. Pramila Jayapal, Grace Meng, Judy Chu and André Carson introduced the House resolution April 15, which condemns the shooting, honors the eight victims and urges the Justice Department to restore and expand programs aimed at preventing hate crimes.
The Sikh Coalition marked the anniversary with a statement acknowledging the unresolved questions surrounding the case. “While the question of motive still remains unsettled for many in the local and national Sikh community, the importance of commemoration remains,” the organization said on social media.

The big picture

Sikh Americans continue to face heightened bias five years later, data shows. Asian Americans Advancing Justice (AAJC) also says bias against Asian and South Asian Americans remains a pressing problem driven by damaging rhetoric and weak accountability mechanisms.
The Indianapolis case similarly underscores a longstanding pattern for Sikh Americans, whose visible articles of faith have made them frequent targets of violence even when official findings stop short of declaring bias a motive.
This story is part of The Rebel Yellow Newsletter — a bold newsletter from the creators of NextShark, reclaiming our stories and celebrating Asian American voices.
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