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It has been suggested that Draft:Nurul Amin Shah Alam be merged into this article. ( Discuss ) Proposed since March 2026. |
| Date | February 24, 2026 |
|---|---|
| Location | Buffalo, New York |
On February 24, 2026, Nurul Amin Shah Alam (born January 1, 1970), [1] a 56-year-old blind Rohingya refugee, was found dead after being dropped off near a Tim Hortons by United States Border Patrol agents in Buffalo, New York. [2]
Originally from Myanmar, Shah Alam previously worked in construction in Malaysia. [3] He came to the United States with his wife and two of his children in December 2024 "in search of opportunity for his family". [3] The family are Arakan Rohingya [4] and have legal refugee status. [3] He spoke little English, did not read, write, or use electronics, [4] and used a cane to walk. [3] [5]
On February 15, 2025, Shah Alam was arrested by Buffalo police. According to police documents, Shah Alam "unlawfully entered a fenced rear yard" while holding "two long black poles"; he was arrested on assault charges after police physically intercepted him. [1] According to Shah Alam's family, the event was a misunderstanding; Shah Alam had become lost, was using a curtain rod as a walking stick, and did not respond to police because he did not understand English. [4] He was held at the Erie County Holding Center for the next year, until he was released to federal authorities on February 19, 2026. [1] Originally being held for trial, he was released after agreeing to a misdemeanor plea deal, according to Erie County District Attorney Michael J. Keane. [5]
According to reports received by the Buffalo Police Department, was released from Erie County Holding Center on February 19, 2026, to federal authorities around 4:30 pm. [1] U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) later told media that Shah Alam chose to accept a "courtesy ride" to a Tim Hortons location in the Black Rock neighborhood, rather than be directly released from the holding center. A CBP spokesperson, Michael Niezgoda, said Shah Alam was released at what was "determined to be a warm, safe location" and "showed no signs of distress, mobility issues or disabilities requiring special assistance". [5] [2] Surveillance footage shows Shah Alam being brought out of the Border Patrol van near the drive-thru window around 8:18 pm, when only the drive-thru was open. The footage shows him pacing in front of the locked doors, and eventually walking through the parking lot away from the building. [6]
Expecting to be able to pick up Shah Alam from Erie County Holding Center on February 19, his family and his lawyer began a search for him which included the neighborhood Shah Alam lived in when he was detained, and the federal detention center in Batavia, where it was thought Immigration and Customs Enforcement may have been detaining him. [6]
Unable to locate him, Shah Alam's attorney filed a missing persons report on February 22, after federal authorities did not provide him with information on Shah Alam's location. [1] Special Victims Unit detective Richard Hy opened an investigation on February 23. [7] He closed the investigation around noon after "information was obtained that led the detective to believe that the missing person was in the custody of federal authorities"; however, he reopened the case later that afternoon. Outreach to family and neighbors and searches of shelters, hospitals, and the general area were carried out on February 24. [1] At 8:29 pm on February 24, a woman placed a 911 call reporting an unmoving man on Perry Street after seeing him alive there earlier that day around 5:30 pm; the man, identified as Shah Alam on February 25, was pronounced deceased by authorities on scene. [1]
Shah Alam's funeral was held at a local mosque, Masjid Zakariya, on February 26, 2026. [5] The New York Medical Examiner's Office has not released their final report regarding his cause of death. [8]
The death of Shah Alam sparked multiple responses from local authorities. Buffalo Mayor Sean M. Ryan called the death "deeply disturbing and a dereliction of duty by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection," and said that "U.S. Customs and Border Protection must answer for how and why this happened". [9] The Buffalo Police Department announced an investigation into Shah Alam's death. [5] New York Governor Kathy Hochul [3] and congressman Tim Kennedy (26th district) both called for a full investigation. [10] [11] New York Attorney General Letitia James made a statement in which she said her office "is reviewing our legal options". [5]
Responses from other elected officials calling for accountability in the incident included U.S. senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, [12] and U.S. representative Grace Meng. [13]
At a Senate Judiciary Committee oversight hearing on March 3, California senator Alex Padilla accused Kristi Noem, the Secretary of Homeland Security, of lying about the case and told Noem that she should resign, the president should fire her, or that the senate should impeach her. [14] On March 4, during a House Judiciary Committee oversight hearing representative New York representative Jerry Nadler and Maryland representative Jamie Raskin questioned and criticized Noem over the department's handling of the case. Separately, Tim Kennedy called for Noem to investigate the events surrounding Shah Alam's death on the house floor. [14] On March 5, Noem was fired by the president, in part due to criticism of the department's handling of the deaths of Renée Good, Alex Pretti, and Shah Alam. [15]