Fort Bend County Sheriff's Office promotes nation's 1st captain of South Asian descent

Wednesday, March 3, 2021
Fort Bend promotes nation's 1st captain of South Asian descent
Fort Bend promotes nation's 1st captain of South Asian descentA barrier was broken, and it wasn't just in the Fort Bend County Sheriff's Office. In the video, see the significance of Captain Nasir Abbasi's promotion.

FORT BEND COUNTY, Texas (KTRK) -- History was made Tuesday morning as the Fort Bend County Sheriff's Office swore in its new captain. Captain Nasir Abbasi is the first South Asian to rank as captain in the sheriff's office.

"We are all here. We see the true reflection of Fort Bend County," said Captain Abbasi.

Sheriff Eric Fagan, the first Black sheriff in the county in more than 150 years, said part of his mission is to have a staff that reflects the diversity of the county.

SEE ALSO: Texas City and Fort Bend County make history with newly elected Black leaders

"Children need to see people in power that look like them, not just on patrol, but command staff," Fagan said.

Before working in Fort Bend County, Abbasi was a sheriff's deputy in Harris County, where he and Deputy Sandeep Dhaliwal were close friends. Dhaliwal was killed in the line of duty in 2019. His father, Pyara, was at Tuesday's ceremony. He says his late son's legacy will live on, here.

"I see Sandeep in Captain Abbasi. I hope he will take his legacy and bring it here to Fort Bend County and serve the community like he did regardless of religion, color, ethnicity and nationality," said Dhaliwal's father.

Deputy Dhaliwal was known in the community for his distinctive turban and was also the first Sikh deputy in Harris County.

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