Death of a refugee left at a Buffalo doughnut shop by Border Patrol is
ruled a homicide
[April 02, 2026]
By JENNIFER PELTZ and JAKE OFFENHARTZ
The death of a nearly blind refugee from Myanmar who was found on a
Buffalo street in February — five days after Border Patrol agents left
him at a doughnut shop — has been ruled a homicide, authorities said
Wednesday.
The Erie County Medical Examiner's Office didn't reach any conclusions
about responsibility for Nurul Amin Shah Alam's death, which the agency
said was caused by complications of a perforated duodenal ulcer,
precipitated by hypothermia and dehydration. Ruling a death a homicide
means it resulted from another person's actions — or inaction — but
doesn't necessarily mean that a crime was committed.
“This should not have happened,” Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz, a
Democrat, said at a news conference Wednesday. Asked whether the Border
Patrol was responsible for his death, he declined to comment and said
any such determination would be up to law enforcement agencies.
State Attorney General Letitia James and Erie County District Attorney
Mike Keane, both Democrats, noted Wednesday that their offices have been
reviewing the case. Keane said in a statement that his office had
requested Shah Alam's full autopsy report but “it would be
inappropriate” to comment further.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection pointed Wednesday to its previous
statement that Shah Alam “showed no signs of distress, mobility issues,
or disabilities requiring special assistance” when agents dropped him
off Feb. 19 at a Tim Hortons restaurant.
“This death had NOTHING to do” with Border Patrol, its parent agency,
the Department of Homeland Security, said in a Feb. 27 social media
post, decrying news coverage of the case as an effort “to demonize our
law enforcement.”

Immigrant advocates called Wednesday for justice for Shah Alam, a member
of the Muslim Rohingya ethnic minority. The group has faced
discrimination and oppression in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.
Shah Alam sought safety in the U.S. and “instead, he was left to die in
the street,” New York Immigration Coalition President Murad Awawdeh
said, calling for a criminal investigation into the Border Patrol
agents’ conduct: “Every single person who was involved must be held
responsible.”
Gov. Kathy Hochul similarly called for accountability for everyone
involved and said her aides spoke to the district attorney Wednesday
afternoon. Hochul, a Democrat and Buffalo native, lambasted “the cruelty
and inhumanity” of depositing a man who could barely see, or speak
English, outside a then-closed restaurant.
Customs and Border Protection has said the restaurant was chosen as “a
warm, safe location” near Shah Alam’s last known address.
Many details about the man's health and final days aren't publicly
known, as his autopsy report is confidential under New York law.
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This image from body camera video provided by the Buffalo Police
Department shows Nurul Amin Shah Alam, center, led by Buffalo Police
officers, Feb. 15, 2025, in Buffalo, N.Y. (Buffalo Police Department
via AP, File)

But Erie County Health Commissioner Gale Burstein told reporters that
Shah Alam developed what is commonly known as a stress ulcer, brought on
in his case by dehydration and exposure to the cold. The ulcer breached
his intestinal wall, creating what is generally a very painful medical
emergency that needs rapid treatment, she said.
Shah Alam, 56, left Myanmar many years ago for Malaysia, where he worked
in construction. He came to the U.S. as a refugee with his wife and two
of his children in December 2024, according to advocates for the family.
Imran Fazal, who knows the family and founded a group called the
Rohingya Empowerment Community, said Shah Alam's death left people
grieving and fearful.
“This tragedy was entirely preventable, and it reflects a serious
failure in the systems meant to protect vulnerable people," Fazal said
Wednesday.
Shah Alam spent about a year in the Erie County jail on felony assault
and other charges after a 2025 struggle with police who encountered him
carrying what appeared to be curtain rods. Police said he bit two
officers; advocates for his family said that he hadn't understood
officers’ commands to drop the items.
He eventually pleaded guilty to two lesser, misdemeanor charges and was
released from jail Feb. 19. Border Patrol then briefly detained him
before determining that he wasn't eligible for deportation. His family,
which had been awaiting his release from jail, wasn't informed of it.
Surveillance video, obtained by the Investigative Post, showed Shah Alam
treading carefully through the Tim Hortons' empty parking lot in his
county-issued jail booties, pulling his hood up against the cold and
walking off into the night.
Shah Alam’s lawyer ultimately reported him missing to Buffalo police on
Feb. 22.
On Feb. 24, he was found dead near the downtown sports arena where the
NHL’s Buffalo Sabres play. It was unclear how he got there from the Tim
Hortons, several miles away, and Burstein said Wednesday that it was
impossible to determine exactly when he died.
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