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Deportation Order Linked to Organized Crime and the Lawrence Bishnoi Gang

Wednesday, June 17, 2026
5 min read
Deportation Order Linked to Organized Crime and the Lawrence Bishnoi Gang

Something big is happening with Punjabi singer AP Dhillon’s house firing case. Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board just ordered the deportation of Indian national Abhijeet Kingra. The reason? They found him connected to the Lawrence Bishnoi gang . This group, apparently, is involved in a lot of serious stuff murder, extortion, shootings, arson, all that kind of organized crime activity.

Kingra had landed in Canada on a student visa. That’s where things got messy for him legally. The IRB ruling basically found he was involved in something violent back in British Columbia. They said he participated in a shooting incident there fourteen rounds were fired. And not just that. One of his supposed accomplices also set fire to vehicles belonging to someone else.

Kingra and this other person? They’re facing allegations from another similar incident over in Surrey, BC too. It seems like this isn't an isolated thing.

This deportation order fits into a much wider crackdown by Canadian authorities on organized crime groups. The Canada Border Services Agency CBSA is saying they’ve launched over four hundred investigations nationwide linked to criminal activity. Fifty-five suspects have already been removed from the country, just in case that matters here.

During the hearing, an IRB member named Azeem Lalji weighed in. He pointed out that a British Columbia court had already established Kingra was part of the Bishnoi gang. The board noted that this group is tied to some really heavy stuff: murder, shootings, arson, extortion, and threats. Lalji observed something worrying gang-linked extortion seems to be spiking across British Columbia, Alberta, and Ontario. Law enforcement agencies are clearly uneasy about it all.

Kingra tried to tell the board his side of the story during the hearing. He claimed he was offered four thousand dollars to help attack AP Dhillon’s residence on September 2nd, 2024. But he spun it. He said he didn't know he was working for the Bishnoi gang. He just accepted the money to support his family.

Then there was the pushback from CBSA officer Jasbir Sandhu. Sandhu argued that whatever happened at Dhillon’s place wasn't really about extortion. It was more about the Bishnoi gang trying to show off their reach. Their influence, you know?

Canadian authorities also kept pushing back on this narrative. They maintained something important: the gang operates in a way that’s compartmentalized. Lower-level members often don't know much about the senior players. The agency highlighted that Kingra himself had already admitted to two criminal charges. Those charges explicitly stated he acted under the direction of the Bishnoi gang. It just shows how deep this network goes.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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