Twitter
Advertisement

Friends remember Toor as a person with golden heart

Vajinder Toor, who was shot dead by a disgruntled Chinese colleague, was remembered by friends as a "very intelligent, hardworking young doctor".

Latest News
article-main
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

American Vajinder Toor, who was shot dead by his disgruntled Chinese colleague, was today remembered by friends as a "very intelligent, hardworking young doctor" with a golden heart.

Toor, 34, was gunned down on Monday outside his Branford, Connecticut, home, where he was living while doing research at Yale University.

Dr Lishan Wang, who shot Toor, also fired at his pregnant wife Parneeta Sidhu, but she escaped unhurt.

"We found out about this [incident] yesterday," said Heidi Shalev, a spokesperson for Austin Regional Clinic, where Toor had last practised medicine. "It is really unfortunate. Really, really sad."

When he left to do research in infectious diseases at Yale, Toor had promised his colleagues at the Austin Regional Clinic that he would be back when he finished his fellowship.

"He had a golden heart. He was very warm and an eager, hardworking young doctor," the Austin-American Statesman newspaper quoted Hue Nguyen, a clinical nurse manager who worked with Toor in cardiac care, as saying.

"I could always count on him to cover extra shifts. He was a very intelligent guy and very agreeable," said Tim Rye, regional director of operations for Austin Regional.

Toor told Rye that in his spare time he played soccer and enjoyed time with his three-year-old son.

Nguyen recalled how Toor missed his wife and son when they went away to visit family. He showed her pictures of his son and followed their return trip on his iPhone. Toor kept "telling me how many hours it would be until they would be home", she said.

"He cared so much about his family," Nguyen said. "It makes me want to cry."

He stood out among doctors for his intimate knowledge of each patient he cared for, knowing "their situation, just like a social worker", she said.

A graduate of Guru Gobind Singh Medical College at Punjab University in India, Toor received a medical licence in Texas in August 2008 and started working for the Austin Regional Clinic.

It was his first job after he completed his physician training, Rye said.

Wang, a Chinese national, was a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Texas Health Science Centre at the San Antonio School of Medicine from 2002 to 2006.

When he was arrested, Wang had information about doctors in his residency programme when he was fired in July 2008 from Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Centre, along with 1,000 rounds of ammunition, three handguns, a hammer, a knife, and a picture of Toor.

Wang claims that Toor, his supervisor and chief resident in the department of medicine at Kingsbrook, unfairly subjected him to blood tests and X-rays when Wang was ill and on duty.

"It was at this time that Dr Wang first realised that (the hospital) perceived him as being disabled in that he may suffer mental impairment," a legal suit filed by Wang said.

Wang also alleged that Toor reprimanded him in front of others for ignoring pages and calls at the hospital.

He has been charged with murder and firearms offences and is being held on $2 million bail. He will appear in court again on May 11.

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement