Latest update June 21st, 2026 12:48 AM
Jan 13, 2018 News
New York (New York Daily News): Dhanraj Mangra and his wife escaped the violence of Guyana to start over in New York City.
Twelve years after they made the move to safer shores, the 68-year-old father of five was killed. Mangra was found unconscious on Jamaica Ave. near 207th St. in Queens Village at 8:30 p.m. on January 3, cops said.
He died at Queens Hospital after a pair of muggers attacked him and slammed his head against a parked car, his heartbroken wife said Thursday.
“It’s not right that they killed him,” Bibi Mangra, 63, said about the two creeps, as tears streamed down her face. “They want his wallet? Take it. But don’t kill him. He’s an old man, he’s not a young person.”
On the night the retired UPS security guard died, his wife, a home health aide who works on Long Island, returned home, fell asleep and left before sunrise the next morning, thinking her husband was still in bed.
“I walked out quietly because I usually don’t wake him,” Mangra said. “I didn’t even realize he still wasn’t home. When I reached work, I kept calling his phone and there was no answer. I started calling my children but they couldn’t reach him either.”
“Then the hospital called me and said he died,” she said, choking back tears.
Mangra knew something was off when doctors said her husband died of a heart attack.
“He was a very healthy person,” she explained. “I know he’s a strong person. He never complained about stomach pain, anything. I was so surprised to hear (about the heart attack).”
She grew more suspicious when she viewed his body in preparation for his funeral.
“At the funeral parlor, when I was putting on his clothes, I saw cuts on his forehead and his chin,” she said. “Somebody definitely did this to him.”
Police later told her that they are looking for two men who knocked him down and robbed him.
As Mangra fell, he hit his head on a parked car, cops said. The heartless muggers ran off with his iPhone, his credit cards and cash, police said.
The Mangras were married for 46 years and have five grown children.
“He was a very good husband,” the grieving widow said. “When I would come home, he would always be cooking something for me.”
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Your children are starving, and you giving away their food to an already fat pussycat.
Jun 21, 2026
Beharry U19 School’s T20 Cricket tournament… Kaieteur Sports – T20 School’s Under-19 cricket action continued yesterday on the West Side at the Uitvlugt Community Center Ground, with a few...Jun 21, 2026
(Kaieteur News) – There are few things more moving than a sudden conversion. Saul had his road to Damascus. St. Augustine heard a divine voice. And now thousands of overseas-based Guyanese are experiencing their own spiritual awakening. After decades of living in Brooklyn, Toronto, Miami,...Jun 21, 2026
By Sir Ronald Sanders (Kaieteur News) – I have spent a decade in the councils of the Organization of American States. I have watched governments come and go, seen some crises handled well and others handled badly, sat through more commemorative meetings than sessions discussing pressing issues,...Jun 21, 2026
Hard Truths by GHK Lall (Kaieteur News) – Guyanese should get first prize for their tolerance for bull, their bottomless reservoir of docility. And humour. They have grown in those respects relative to their head-of-state. Whatever has taken over his head, the astonishing is what...Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: glennlall2000@gmail.com / kaieteurnews@yahoo.com