One of the Indian men shot during the attack — Srinivas Kuchibhotla, 32 — died in the hospital from his wounds, police said. Alok Madasani, 32, of Overland Park, Kan., who was injured, was released from the hospital on Thursday, a day after the attack. Both men worked for Garmin, the technology firm. A third man who apparently tried to intervene was also wounded in the shooting.

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Police arrested and charged Adam W. Purinton, 51, with carrying out the shooting in Olathe, a city about 20 miles southwest of Kansas City. Purinton, who made his first court appearance Monday, apparently thought the two men he shot were Iranian, according to a 911 call released after he was taken into custody.

Following the shooting at Austin’s Bar and Grill, authorities did not immediately indicate whether they thought it was a hate crime. Officials instead said they were probing to see if it was spurred by bias, and they cautioned in the days after the shooting that it was still early in their investigation.

On Tuesday afternoon, nearly a week after Kuchibhotla was shot and killed, the FBI announced that the investigation had prompted officials to investigate the incident as a hate crime, which could lead to potential federal charges down the line.

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“Based upon the initial investigative activity, the FBI, in conjunction with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, is investigating this incident as a hate crime,” an FBI spokeswoman said in a statement. “The FBI will continue to work jointly with Olathe Police Department and our state and local partners regarding this ongoing investigation.”

The shooting has continued to resonate in India, where some have linked the killing to what they see as a rise in racism in the United States since Trump’s election. In some cases, students who dreamed about traveling to the United States to study now say they are scared to go to the country. Madasani’s father told the Hindustan Times he had asked his son to come home and, after the shooting, implored other parents not to send their children there.

“The situation seems to be pretty bad after Trump took over as the U.S. president,” he said. “I appeal to all the parents in India not to send their children to the United States in the present circumstances.”

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The White House has pushed back against any suggestion that links Trump’s rhetoric about immigrants to the shooting, but his administration has otherwise largely been silent on the issue, prompting a critical Kansas City Star editorial published online Monday evening.

“At some point, embarrassingly late begins to verge on something more disquieting,” the editorial states. “President Donald Trump has silently planted himself in that space.”

During his address to Congress on Tuesday night, Trump opened his speech by referring both to the shooting in Kansas and a recent spate of anti-Semitic acts. He has been criticized for not speaking out at all about the shooting and for minimal comments about the anti-Semitic incidents.

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“Recent threats targeting Jewish Community Centers and vandalism of Jewish cemeteries, as well as last week’s shooting in Kansas City, remind us that while we may be a nation divided on policies, we are a country that stands united in condemning hate and evil in all its forms,” Trump said. (Olathe is actually just outside Kansas City.)

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Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House principal deputy press secretary, had also condemned the shooting on Tuesday and told reporters that Trump was going to mention it on Capitol Hill.

“As more facts come to light and it begins to look like this was an act of racially motivated hatred,” Sanders said. “I want to reiterate the President condemns these or any other racially or religiously motivated attacks in the strongest terms. They have no place in our country.”

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A third man injured in the attack, Ian Grillot, said he tried to intervene during the shooting; he, too, was shot. In video posted online, Grillot, his neck in a brace, insisted he is not a hero, but instead was just doing the right thing.

“I was just doing what anyone should have done for another human being,” Grillot said. “It’s not about where he was from or his ethnicity. We’re all humans. I just felt I did what was naturally right to do.”

In India, hundreds of mourning relatives gathered Tuesday at funeral rites for Kuchibhotla, a somber gathering that gave way to political overtones, as politicians turned up with signs, one reading “Down with Trump.” Kuchibhotla’s wife and mother wept as they washed and prepared his body for cremation, and his mother had to be revived after fainting.

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Purinton has previously faced criminal charges for driving incidents, including a 2008 charge for speeding and another incident in 1999 where he was flagged for driving under the influence. He has been charged with murder and attempted murder for the Olathe shooting. The Johnson County district attorney has noted that Kansas has no hate crime statutes, so if Purinton is to be charged with such a crime, it has to be on a federal level.

Philip Rucker contributed to this report.

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