Wed. Jan 14th, 2026

Bishnoi Gang Link Uncovered in Attacks on Kapil Sharma’s Canadian Café as Police Identify Shooters

Delhi Police have identified the two gunmen responsible for multiple firing incidents at actor-comedian Kapil Sharma’s Kap’s Café in Surrey, Canada, revealing deep ties to the Lawrence Bishnoi network. The shooters — Sherry, also known as Gurjot, and Daljot Rehal — were named following the interrogation of Bandhu Maan Singh Sekhon, arrested last month for allegedly supplying weapons and logistical support for the attacks.

According to investigators, Singh provided guns and a getaway vehicle to Bishnoi associate Goldy Dhillon under instructions from gangster Sonu Khatri, also known as Rajesh. Police say Khatri’s cousins, Sherry and Daljot, carried out all three shootings targeting Kap’s Café since July. The restaurant, launched by Sharma earlier this year in British Columbia, was attacked on July 10, August 7, and October 16.

Sources also claim the mastermind behind the attacks has been identified. The shooters acted under the direction of another alleged gangster, Seepu, further exposing the gangland web behind the escalating violence.

The investigation took a darker turn with the discovery of a Pakistan-based connection. Singh is believed to be a close associate of gangster Harry Chatha, whose name has surfaced in cases linked to cross-border weapons smuggling into India. Police sources say Chatha operates under the influence of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and that Singh helped smuggle weapons from Pakistan into India. Singh returned from Canada on August 23 and was arrested in Ludhiana in late November.

The revelations have intensified efforts by central agencies, who are now coordinating with Canadian authorities to track down the shooters and the masterminds who orchestrated the attacks. The repeated shootings caused fear both within the local Punjabi community and within the entertainment industry, with Sharma’s security heightened after a second attack in which at least 25 rounds were fired.

In the first attack on July 10, around 10 shots were fired at the café’s windows while employees were inside. A man named Harjit Singh Laddi, linked to a local extremist group, claimed responsibility. The third shooting on October 16 was captured in a video showing a gunman firing at least 12 shots from a car window.

With gang networks stretching across borders and involving high-profile targets, investigators say the case has now escalated far beyond a local criminal matter — becoming a multi-agency, international pursuit.

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