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Tag: Harjinder Singh

  • Joint funeral held in South Miami-Dade for victims of fatal Florida turnpike crash

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    Milena Malaver/Miami Herald

    Sounds of music, song and sorrow swelled inside a small South Miami-Dade church on Saturday, as loved ones of victims killed in an August semi-truck crash on Florida’s Turnpike gathered to say their last goodbyes.

    News of the crash made national headlines and landed one man in jail, a truck driver, Harjinder Singh, 28, who authorities say caused the deaths by making an illegal U-turn with his 18-wheeler, blocking the northbound lanes of the highway.

    The crash took the lives of driver Herby Dufresne, 30, and passengers Faniola Joseph, 37, and Rodrigue Dor, 54. The three were visiting South Florida, where they had once lived, before returning home to Indiana. Dor and Joseph died at the scene. Dufresne died later at the hospital.

    Inside Princeton Church of the Nazarene, two white coffins—matching and gleaming under the sanctuary lights—rested side by side holding Joseph and Dufresne. Nearly every seat in the church was filled, the air thick with grief and gospel.

    READ MORE: ‘It’s a big loss for us.’ Family mourns Haitian immigrant killed in truck crash

    Dor’s service had been held two weeks earlier on Sept. 20, at Haitian Evangelical Baptist Church. He was laid to rest at Vista Memorial Gardens in Miami Lakes.

    In Princeton, the community came together to mourn Dufresne and Joseph, two friends who had died together and were buried at Palms Woodlawn Cemetery in Naranja.

    Joseph was remembered as a woman of remarkable strength, someone who, as one loved one put it, was “born only to give love.”

    She stood as a pillar for her family—a steady presence and a nurturing soul. At the heart of her life was her daughter, Angeline, whom friends and relatives said Joseph raised to be both resilient and tender, reflecting her mother’s own spirit.

    Angeline was unable to attend the funeral because she lives in the Dominican Republic.

    Memorial pamphlets for Faniola Joseph and Herby Dufresne given to the attendees of their funeral service at the Princeton Church of Nazarene on Oct. 4, 2025.
    Memorial pamphlets for Faniola Joseph and Herby Dufresne given to the attendees of their funeral service at the Princeton Church of Nazarene on Oct. 4, 2025. Milena Malaver/Miami Herald

    “She served as a guiding star for her family, and today, even though she is no longer with us, her light will always shine in our memories and prayers,” a loved one said in Creole during the service.

    A loving father, brother and son

    Dufresne was born in Port-au-Prince, the only son among five children, and was the father of two young daughters.

    “He had a lot of love for all his family and friends. When he met you, he would hug you with a big smile on his lips,” said his cousin, Oscar Cedieu, speaking in Haitian Creole.

    The service itself pulsed with sound with horns blaring, drums pounding and voices rising in song. Friends, relatives and reverends took turns at the podium singing in memory of a man who himself had loved music, playing several instruments.

    Yet even the loudest music could not drown out the anguish. Sobs and screams split the air. Women clutched children in their arms, weeping uncontrollably. Some had to be carried out when grief overcame them. At one point, a woman fainted and was lifted out of the church.

    Dufresne’s sister Katy Dufresne painted a picture of her brother: strong, kind, a man who cooked with passion and sang every morning in the kitchen.

    “He loved to sing a lot in the morning,” she said at the podium in Creole. “The first thing that will wake you up is a song.”

    Herby Dufresne, 30, a single dad with a 5-year-old and another child on the way, was killed Aug. 12 after the minivan he was driving slammed into a semi tractor-trailer that had made an illegal U-turn on the Florida Turnpike near Fort Pierce. The accident garnered national attention after it was discovered the driver was an undocumented driver from India. Dufresne died in the accident along with his two passengers, who were also Haitian.
    Herby Dufresne, 30, a single dad with a 5-year-old and another child on the way, was killed Aug. 12 after the minivan he was driving slammed into a semi tractor-trailer that had made an illegal U-turn on the Florida Turnpike near Fort Pierce. The accident garnered national attention after it was discovered the driver was an undocumented driver from India. Dufresne died in the accident along with his two passengers, who were also Haitian. Courtesy of friend of Herby Dufresne

    But she also shared his hesitations about leaving Haiti. Though he was approved to come to the United States in December 2023, Dufresne had confessed that he didn’t want to leave their mother behind. Still, he sought a better life. Katy’s last memory of him was their visit together, with Joseph and Dor, just before the crash.

    In one of their final conversations, he had told her she was the strength of their family.

    ‘Justice and reparations’

    The fatal crash rippled far beyond South Florida’s Haitian community—it reached the Sikh community as well. Authorities have charged Harjinder Singh, a Sikh, and the truck driver in the fatal crash, with vehicular homicide. Singh is being held at the St. Lucie County Jail on no bond.

    READ MORE: Sikhs rally at St. Lucie jail to honor three who died in Turnpike truck crash

    Sikhs for Justice, an activist group, stepped in to cover funeral costs and pledged $100,000 in humanitarian aid for the victims’ families. The donation came entirely from Dr. Bakhshish Singh Sandhu, a Pennsylvania-based physician and co-founder of the group, who attended Saturday’s service and spoke during the service.

    “No words can measure their loss, but we have stood with them to ensure their loved ones are laid to rest with dignity,” said Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, the group’s general counsel.

    READ MORE: Truck driver in fatal Florida Turnpike crash expresses grief in first statement

    The aid was distributed in coordination with Haiti’s Consulate General in Miami. Consul General Yverick Delerme Cyril personally thanked the organization for its support.

    Singh’s immigration status and commercial license sparked national debate, with Gov. Ron DeSantis and Republican leaders seizing on the case as a flashpoint in immigration.

    Back inside the church, Joseph’s cousin Fekel Morisette took the podium and called the congregation to its feet.

    “Justice and reparation,” he said—then asked the packed church to repeat the words after him.

    This story was originally published October 4, 2025 at 4:29 PM.

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    Milena Malaver

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  • Stockton man thrust into national spotlight after fatal collision in Florida

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    Aug. 20—A long-haul truck driver accused of killing three people in a Florida traffic collision was arrested in San Joaquin County over the weekend.

    Newsweek reported on Monday that 28-year-old Stockton resident Harjinder Singh was arrested by U.S. Marshals on suspicion of three counts of vehicular homicide.

    He was booked into San Joaquin County Jail on Saturday, and appeared for arraignment Tuesday, according to inmate records.

    The Miami Herald reported that the Aug. 12 crash occurred when Singh attempted to make a U-turn in his 18-wheeler at an “official use only” area of the Florida Turnpike 19 miles north of Fort Pierce.

    The truck was blocking all the northbound lanes as a 2015 black Chrysler Town & Country minivan approached in the middle lane and slammed into the 18-wheeler, killing its three occupants.

    Two passengers in the minivan — a 37-year-old woman from Pompano Beach and a 54-year-old man from Miami — died at the scene. The driver, a 30-year-old man from Florida City, later died at a hospital, according to the Herald.

    Neither Singh or as his passenger, 25-year-old Harneet Singh of Yuba City, were injured in the collision.

    The pair flew to Sacramento on Aug. 13, as law enforcement does not make an arrest at the scene of vehicle crashes, the Herald reported.

    Vehicular homicide is punishable by as much as 15 years in prison in that state.

    According to Newsweek, federal immigration authorities have issued a detainer which could lead to deportation proceedings once the criminal case is concluded, reports state.

    In his monthly address to the public posted on social media, San Joaquin County Sheriff Pat Withrow said he was not able to hold Singh, an undocumented immigrant, on an ICE hold due to California law.

    “He’s from out of the country, and he’s here illegally, but California does not allow me to honor the ICE hold because he has committed no prior crimes,” Withrow said. “We don’t know if this was gross negligence or an intentional act.”

    The Florida Highway Patrol told the Herald that Singh, who has a commercial driver’s license in California, entered the United States illegally in 2018 through the Mexican border.

    It’s unclear how he obtained a commercial driver’s license, as California law requires applicants to show proof they are in the U.S. legally, among other requirements, according to the California Commercial Driver’s Handbook.

    California’s AB 60 allows undocumented immigrants to apply for a driver’s license if they can provide proof of identity and residency. These licenses are marked “not for federal identification.”

    Singh had been linked online to a 2019 crash in Arkansas that destroyed a historic bridge, but officials confirmed to Newsweek Monday he wasn’t involved in that accident.

    That driver, also named Harjinder Singh, was fired by the US Citylink Corporation following the crash, reports state.

    News of the Florida crash went national, the Herald reported, with Singh being at the center of several social media posts by the Trump administration on Sunday and Monday, prompting a response from Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    In one post, Newsom’s press office said the federal government issued Singh an employment authorization document during Trump’s first term, which allows foreign nationals to work legally in the U.S.

    In response, Tricia McLaughlin, the assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security, said Singh’s work authorization was rejected in 2020 while Trump was in office and approved the following year under the Biden administration, the Herald reported.

    San Joaquin County District Attorney Ron Freitas filed a petition for a fugitive warrant against Singh on Tuesday. Singh agreed to waive extradition and awaiting transport to Florida.

    “Public safety depends on strong collaboration between states,” Freitas said. “Our office has fulfilled its role in this matter, and Harjinder Singh will now face consequences in Florida.”

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  • 3 Blue States Could Be At Fault In Fatal Florida Car Crash, Transportation Secretary Says

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    The U.S. Department of Transportation is investigating three blue states’ possible involvement in an Aug. 12 fatal car crash in Florida that killed three.

    Illegal immigrant truck driver Harjinder Singh stands accused of causing the crash by making an illegal U-turn on the Florida Turnpike 19 miles north of Fort Pierce in St. Lucie County.

    He was given a work permit in the Biden administration, officials said Monday. 

    According to the Transportation Department’s preliminary investigation, Washington state, New Mexico, and California all may have violated federal regulations in allowing Singh to have a commercial driver’s license.

    “States MUST FOLLOW THE RULES,” Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on the social media platform X. “If they had, this driver would NEVER have been behind the wheel, and three precious lives would still be with us.”

    Washington state improperly issued the driver a full-term commercial driver’s license, Duffy said, which asylum-seekers and illegal aliens are not allowed to receive.

    New Mexico failed to conduct an English Language Proficiency test when the driver was pulled over for speeding, even though ELP tests have been required since June 25.

    Duffy is also looking into California’s issuance of the driver’s CDL.

    “The failures here are despicable,” he said. “Nonenforcement and radical immigration policies have turned the trucking industry into a lawless frontier, resulting in unqualified foreign drivers improperly acquiring licenses to operate 40-ton vehicles.”

    The Washington, New Mexico, and California Departments of Transportations did not immediately respond to The Daily Signal’s request for comment.

    Democrat California Gov. Gavin Newsom denied fault. “As usual, the Trump administration is either lying or clueless,” Newsom’s press office wrote on X. 

    The Trump administration requires commercial drivers to speak English, which the president made America’s national language in an executive order.

    Duffy promised to release more details on the investigation into the crash soon.

    Syndicated with permission from The Daily Signal.

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    Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell

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