New Yorkers rally as stomping attack suspect faces anti-Asian hate crime charge

New Yorkers rally as stomping attack suspect faces anti-Asian hate crime charge
A protester takes part in a Stop Asian Hate rally at Times Square in New York on Sunday.
PHOTO: Reuters

Asian-Americans and community activists rallied on Monday outside a New York courthouse where a man charged with assaulting a 65-year-old Filipino woman in a hate crime was due to face his first hearing before a Manhattan Criminal Court judge.

Police have identified Brandon Elliot, 38, as the man seen in a video kicking the woman to the ground and then stomping on her near Times Square on March 29.

Elliot was on lifetime parole since 2019 after serving a prison term for murdering his mother in 2002, according to local media citing court records.

He was arraigned last week on two charges of second-degree assault as a hate crime and one count of first-degree attempted assault as a hate crime.

“This attack would not have happened if he was not released,” said Phil Wong, president of the Chinese-American Citizens Alliance of Greater New York, standing in front of the courthouse, where demonstrators raised signs to “speak up against Asian hate” and to support the police.

The New York Times identified the victim as Vilma Kari, an immigrant from the Philippines, citing a law enforcement source.

Hate crimes reported against Asian Americans increased 149 per cent annually in 2020 in 16 major US cities, according to the Centre for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino.

Concern over such crimes was heightened when six Asian women were among eight people shot dead last month at Atlanta-area spas.

In California, Orange County prosecutors on Monday charged a man with hate crimes for throwing rocks at an Asian woman and her six-year-old son as they drove, cracking their car’s windscreen.

“The man later told police Koreans in the area were trying to control him,” the District Attorney’s office said.

A 28-year-old man was charged with felony violation of civil rights and vandalism with a hate crime enhancement, plus a misdemeanour count for throwing the rock, prosecutors said.

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