Feds: 'Knockout' attack was a hate crime
updated 8:59 PM EST, Thu December 26, 2013
Feds: 'Knockout game' attack a hate crime
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: Alleged attacker will be in court Friday afternoon for detention hearing
- His attorney says his client has bipolar disorder
- Victim suffered two jaw fractures and was hospitalized for days, complaint says
- In separate case, New York police charged a knockout suspect with a hate crime
Conrad Alvin Barrett, 27,
of Katy, Texas, has been charged with one count of violating the
Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act.
According to the federal
complaint, Barrett attacked the 79-year-old man "because of the man's
race and color." He will next appear in court Friday afternoon for a
detention hearing.
The suspect made a video
of the attack November 24, the complaint said. In the video, he
allegedly commented that "the plan is to see if I were to hit a black
person, would this be nationally televised?"
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He then allegedly "hit
the man with such force that the man immediately fell to the ground.
Barrett then laughed and said 'knockout,' as he ran to his vehicle and
fled."
The victim suffered two jaw fractures and was hospitalized for several days, the complaint said.
Barrett's attorney, George Parnham, told CNN the affidavit does not "pull back the layers of mental health."
His client has bipolar disorder and takes medication, Parnham said in an earlier call.
Parnham said he could not
state whether his client carried out the attack, but, "mental health
issues definitely played a part in anything that occurred."
Barrett "is very sorry
for this person," Parnham said, adding that he and his client haven't
had much opportunity to discuss the facts of the case.
'Knockout game' a national problem
The "knockout game" is an assault in which an assailant aims to knock out an unsuspecting victim with one punch.
According to the Justice
Department complaint, there have been "knockout game" incidents, some
of which have been called other names, as long ago as 1992.
New York police previously charged suspect Marajh Amrit with a hate crime in the alleged attack of a white Jewish man as part of a "knockout" game.
Similar cases have been reported recently in several states, including Illinois, Missouri and Washington.
"Hate crimes tear at the
fabric of entire communities," U.S. Acting Assistant Attorney General
Jocelyn Samuels said Thursday in a Justice Department statement
announcing the charge against Barrett. "As always, the Civil Rights
Division will work with our federal and state law enforcement partners
to ensure that hate crimes are identified and prosecuted, and that
justice is done."
Barrett, who is white,
allegedly recorded himself on his cell phone attacking the man and
showed the video to others, the department said. "The complaint alleges
Barrett made several videos, one in which he identifies himself and
another in which he makes a racial slur. In addition, Barrett had
allegedly been working up the 'courage' to play the 'knockout game' for
approximately a week."
The victim's face was swollen on one side, and he has had to use a straw to drink, a nephew, Joseph Lewis, told CNN affiliate KTRK-TV in Houston.
The station reported that Barrett faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine if convicted.
Barrett told an off-duty police officer what happened and shared a video, saying he felt bad, the affidavit said.
In other videos on his
phone that police confiscated, Barrett used the N-word and said that
African-Americans "haven't fully experienced the blessing of evolution,"
according to the criminal complaint.
"It is unimaginable in
this day and age that one could be drawn to violently attack another
based on the color of their skin," said Special Agent in Charge Stephen
Morris of the FBI's Houston office. "We remind all citizens that we are
protected under the law from such racially motivated attacks, and
encourage everyone to report such crimes to the FBI."
New York case
In a separate case, New York City police on Wednesday searched for a man who allegedly punched a 33-year-old woman in the back of the head in Brooklyn in what may be a "knockout" assault.
Despite that and other
cases, New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said last month that city
officials haven't seen evidence of a trend, though they are not ruling
out the idea.
"The press has named it
the so-called knockout game. We don't discount that that exists. It's a
possibility. We've investigated and will continue to investigate," Kelly
told reporters in late November.
CNN's Morgan Winsor, Poppy Harlow and Shimon Prokupecz contributed to this report.
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