Jump to content

PITTSBURG VENKANNA GUDI LO DONGATANAM!!!


Recommended Posts

Posted

PITTSBURG VENKANNA GUDI lo dongatanam jarigindi . 10-15 K worth hundi dabbulu...inkaa...additional gaa devudi nagalu anni kottukellipoyaaru anta.

guard ni kattesi..taalam laakkuni...aa pani chesaar uanta 4 dundagulu..

hmmm..choodabotunte..appatlo HOUSTON lo INDIANs ni target cheesi house burgularies jariginattu..inak temples ni...rich indian communities ni target chesetattu unnaru...

BHADRAM KODAKOOOO!!!

Posted

nenu vinna but em poyayaooo teledu  !q# !q# !q# !q# !q#

Posted

sAng_banghead2 sAng_banghead2 sAng_banghead2 sAng_banghead2

Posted

chaavuni kooda vethukunte velley janalu inka unnaru.  sFun_duh sFun_duh sFun_duh

Posted

[url=http://www.wkbn.com/content/news/pastate/story/4-gunmen-rob-Hindu-temple-of-15K-near-Pittsburgh/Rz8i7dYpX0SqKpR-MwqiEQ.cspx?rss=1948]http://www.wkbn.com/content/news/pastate/story/4-gunmen-rob-Hindu-temple-of-15K-near-Pittsburgh/Rz8i7dYpX0SqKpR-MwqiEQ.cspx?rss=1948[/url]


4 gunmen rob Hindu temple of $15K near Pittsburgh
PENN HILLS, Pa. (AP) — Police believe four masked men who robbed a Pittsburgh-area Hindu temple at gunpoint may have worked there in the past or were otherwise familiar with its layout.

Penn Hills police Chief Howard Burton says the robbery at the Sri Venkateswara Temple is obvious the work of "someone who has some kind of working knowledge of the place."

The temple was robbed about 12:15 a.m. Thursday after the robbers tied up a security guard, then stole three safes from an office. The safes contained about $15,000 in cash and jewels.

The temple sits on a hill overlooking Interstate 376 east of Pittsburgh, but is only accessible by a steep, winding road. That's just one reason Burton believes the robbery might be the work of outside contractors or past employees who worked there.

The temple opened in 1976.

Posted

[url=http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11077/1132874-56.stm]http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11077/1132874-56.stm[/url]

Penn Hills Hindu temple robbed; men take safes with $15,000
Friday, March 18, 2011
By Sadie Gurman, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
PG VIDEO: HINDU TEMPLE ROBBED IN PENN HILLS

A group of men left sacred areas of a Penn Hills Hindu temple untouched when they attacked a guard and looted a business office early Thursday. But their crime stunned the temple's leaders, who changed the locks and worked to restore a sense of security to a place where thousands worship every weekend.

Nagu B. Krishnappa, chairman of the board of trustees at Sri Venkateswara Temple, said he was amazed and hurt when a security guard called him just after midnight with the news: The guard had been stationed in a trailer outside the temple, which sits atop a hill on South McCully Drive, when four men held him at gunpoint.

They tied him up, then blindfolded and robbed him, snatching his knife, his laptop computer, his cell phone and a set of keys that gave them access to the temple's business office, Penn Hills police Chief Howard Burton said. They left the unarmed guard on the floor while they entered the office and stole three safes.

"Once they got that, they left," fleeing down a hillside, Chief Burton said. The guard, Larry Fiscus, 48, heard them get away, managed to untie himself and called police about 15 minutes later.

The temple is striking and visible from the Parkway East but is accessible only by driving up a steep and winding road. Chief Burton said the robbery might have been the work of outside contractors, past employees or someone else who "knew how to get there and knew where it existed."

They do not believe members of the temple were involved.

"You have four people who basically conspired to go to this place, knowing the guard was there," he said. "They seemed to know where they were going."

Dr. Krishnappa said the bandits made off with about $15,000 and also took with them a sense of safety known to the temple's devotees.

One of the earliest Hindu temples built in the United States, the worship site frequently draws thousands of people, he said, some from far-away places. In the 35 years it has been open, "this is the first time this kind of thing happened," Dr. Krishnappa said.

"It is an invasion of privacy and an invasion of the religious institution," he said. "These are kind of sacred places, so it hurts when someone does something like this."

The sanctuary, however, was undisturbed, much to the relief of its membership.

"We are lucky," said Raja Reddy Vangeti, the secretary for the board of directors, to whom the guards report. He said Mr. Fiscus had worked there more than a year. Workers are installing a new security system at the temple, he said, which remains open.

"We can get back cash, we can get back jewelry, credit cards have already been canceled. The religious breach, damage to the deities, injuries to the guard -- those are things we cannot recover."

Sadie Gurman: [email protected], 412-263-1878.

First published on March 18, 2011 at 12:00 am

Posted

haha  :0012391: :0012391: :0012391: :0012391: :0012391: :0012391:

Posted

[quote author=Loverboy link=topic=169682.msg2057461#msg2057461 date=1300514890]
};_ };_ };_ };_ };_
[/quote]

salla badu labbe ba...yenkanna ki donations/funds koduva ledu...richest god on earth..... :0012391: :0012391: :0012391: :0012391:

×
×
  • Create New...