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To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (180452)11/18/2021 7:54:02 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 218617
 
china has zero tolerance for a lot of happenings

I can understand why the four 'boys' did not bother to defend themselves and hit back at the 'girls', but I am unsure why the attacked girl tried to intervene on behalf of the sitting boys who were doing just fine

would observe that much is unwell

the jack got his brown-black and working now on his black belt, after which, the dans

I am teaching him, move in the away direct, but if ever forced to fight, fight hard and harsh, only after understanding the overall situation and lay of the arena

dailymail.co.uk

Cops investigate brutal attack where black teenage girls were filmed beating group of Asian students

Shocking video captured the moment a group of black teenage girls brutally threw punches and screamed profanities at a group of Asian students on the Philadelphia SEPTA train as fellow passengers minded their own business.

It is unclear what sparked the feud, but video footage shows a girl in an all-pink outfit and a black ski mask screaming profanities at five Asian students, four boys and one girl.

The attack happened near the Erie Station around 3.30pm on Wednesday on the Broad Street Line and has led one city official to call for more cops to patrol the trains - where a woman was raped last month as other passengers sat idly by.

In the recent attack, the video opens with the girl in pink screaming at a group of Asian boys while another in a black quarter-zip jacket punches one who is wearing a red jacket.

The girl in pink appears to say, 'You want to doubt my people,' before firing off a string of profanities.

'You want to come on, b***ch? You want to try me, b***ch, f**king try me, I'll f**king beat ya,' she continued screaming as she stood over the the group of sitting boys.

Group of Asian students attacked on Philadelphia SEPTA train



A group of black students attacked a group of Asian students on a Philadelphia SEPTA train on Wednesday



A girl in a different black jacket screamed at the group too, yelling: 'Don't try that s**t again'



A group of three girls stomped on an Asian girl after the girl wearing pink backed her against the train doors and she fell to the ground



The Asian girl (in yellow) screamed as the group of girls stomped on her

She also yelled at a female Asian student standing near the boys.

Another girl, dressed in a black sweater that reads 'confidence collection thurl' across the chest, pointed her finger and screamed at the boys: 'Don't try that s**t again. Don't try that s**t again.'

It is unclear what the other students did to anger the girls.

An older girl, dressed in black with a black bandana over her hair, stepped in and pointed at the boy sitting close to the window next to the one in red and said: 'It was really him, it was really him.'



The group of Asian boys sat by the window as the black girls screamed at them



The Asian girl, who did not speak during the attack, got slapped in the face and had her mask ripped off by one of the other girls



The girl in all pink led the attack and at one point had taken off her shoe to beat the Asian girl in the head with it



Police say they have identified the girls involved in the attack on a group of Asian students

She then proceeded to turn around and slap the mask off the Asian girl, screaming at her: 'Get the f**k out of here, And bitch, stop f**king [indiscernible].'

The Asian girl appears to be upset, but doesn't say anything as she adjusts her mask back over her nose.

The girl in pink then corners her, backing her up until her back's against the door, yelling: 'What? What? What?' as she pushes the Asian girl.

She appears to slam the heel of her hand into the girl's head several times before the girl falls to the ground.

She bends down and continues to hit her before more girls come over and they begin to stomp on her back as she screams.

The girl in pink takes off one of her slipper-like shoes and slams it into the girl's head while calling her a b***ch.

Someone in the background can be heard screaming 'yo, yo, yo.'

The video ends as the girl in pink straightens up to look at the male yelling at them to stop.

A SEPTA spokesperson called the incident 'violent and disturbing,' but reported no major injuries.

The SEPTA and Philadelphia Police, as well as the Philadelphia School Administration, School District Police, and the Philadelphia Human Relations Commissions are investigating.

The Philadelphia School Administration said they 'did have additional Student Support staff on hand at Central High School to support any students who be experiencing anxiety over what happened yesterday.'

SEPTA confirmed to NBC Philadelphia that the suspects have been identified.

A Philadelphia City Councilman David Oh is calling on SEPTA and the Philadelphia School District to increase safety measures.

'There has to be a response by the police, by SEPTA school safety officers, formerly known as school police, and by SEPTA itself. It has a police force and we need to see them,' he said.

DailyMail.com contacted the SEPTA police and the Philadelphia School Administration for a comment.

Last month, a woman was attacked by an illegal immigrant and raped on a SEPTA train, while other passengers didn't intervene.

Fiston Ngoy, a 35-year-old from the Congo who has been living illegally in the U.S. since 2015, was arrested and charged in the rape.

He was seen on surveillance camera footage onboard a SEPTA train near the suburb of Upper Darby.

Police say that as many as 10 bystanders were on the train did nothing but did not help as Ngoy sexually assaulted the stranger shortly after 9.15pm.

The attack continued until 9.52pm, when an off-duty transit worker eventually called 911.

Hate crimes continue to rise around the nation, with an over 300 per cent increase across the US, the New York Daily News reported.

New York City has seen a 96 per cent in hate crimes across the city, with almost three times as many hate crimes against Asians documented compared to the same time as last year.

The unidentified 30-year-old man reported to police that his attackers - three men and two women - asked him: 'What are you doing here, Asian?' before unleashing their fury as hate crimes in New York and around the country spiral out of control.

The attack on Fifth Avenue near 31st Street in the city's Koreatown neighborhood occurred at around 10.30pm on Oct. 23, police said.

He was beaten with wooden sticks and their fists and left him with a head injury.

Three of the five allegedly said anti-Asian remarks to him and are being sought by the NYPD.

The man was repeatedly punched and bashed with sticks by the five attackers, suffering a head injury.

The Big Apple has reported 474 hate crimes as of November 7 - a 96 percent increase from last year during the same time frame when there were 242 such attacks.

Out of the 474 hate crimes this year, 127 attacks were against Asians - a nearly five-fold increase from the 28 attacks against Asians in 2020.



To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (180452)11/18/2021 7:59:49 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218617
 
The boys did well

The girl made a mistake

The girls all wrong and seem beyond redemption

at this rate, police shall have to be dramatically increased
Chief Nestel said they are now offering students at Central High School a safe ride home with a police officer in the aftermath of the attack.
"The benefit of this is the officer can start to get to know the kids because we'll have the same officer there and we'll have an officer on a train full of kids that's coming from Central and going to South Philly," he said. "That starts today."
nbcphiladelphia.com

Teen Girls in SEPTA Attack Will Likely Face Ethnic Intimidation Charges

“This was an attack based on ethnicity and ethnic slurs were used by the attackers,” SEPTA Police Chief Thomas Nestel said. “Hence, why we’re charging ethnic intimidation.”

By David Chang and Brian Sheehan • Published 4 hours ago • Updated 3 hours ago

Several teen girls who were caught on video attacking a group of Asian students on a SEPTA train in Philadelphia will likely face ethnic intimidation charges.

The incident occurred on a Broad Street Line train near SEPTA's Erie Station around 3:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Video of the attack shows a group of teen girls repeatedly punching and screaming at another group of teens on the train. One of the attackers also punches, knocks over and repeatedly kicks a teen girl before slapping her with her shoe. NBC10 is not showing the video after a friend of the victim requested that we remove it due to its traumatic nature.

A SEPTA spokesperson called the incident “violent and disturbing.” He also said no serious injuries were reported.

The four attackers in the video are African American while the victims are of Asian descent and students at Central High School. During a press conference Thursday afternoon, SEPTA Police Chief Thomas Nestel announced that they identified the suspects, who are all under the age of 17, and requested ethnic intimidation and aggravated assault charges for all four of them.

“This was an attack based on ethnicity and ethnic slurs were used by the attackers,” Nestel said. “Hence, why we’re charging ethnic intimidation.”

SEPTA Police, Philadelphia Police, Philadelphia School Administration officials, School District Police and the Philadelphia Human Relations Commission were all involved in the investigation.

A spokeswoman for the District Attorney's Office commented on the request for charges in a statement to Telemundo 62.

"As far as I know the suspects have not yet been arrested," she wrote. "We cannot confirm charging until they are arrested and we have investigatory materials from the police. I will say that generally speaking, in a case like this where there is video and multiple witnesses criminal prosecution of the people responsible is all but certain."

Nestel also said the mother of one of the suspects reached out to them.

"A mother called when she saw her daughter as one of the people involved in the assault and reported her daughter as being one of the attackers," Nestel said.

That woman, who we are not identifying, also spoke with NBC10.

“My daughter and her group were the full aggressors,” she said. “If the Asian children did anything, I would think that it was to protect themselves and that’s just what I got from the video.”

The woman apologized to the victims, calling her daughter’s actions inexcusable.

“We’re all apologetic,” the girl’s mother said. “We are embarrassed, ashamed. It’s not who we represent.”

The woman said her daughter is 12-years-old and had been missing for two weeks after running away from home until SEPTA police called her to say she was in custody on Wednesday.

“I was extremely hurt and this is why I needed to meet with you guys publicly so that you know that my family is very sincerely apologetic about what happened to that child because we all pray that our children make it home safe from school,” she said.

The woman told NBC10 she’s tried reaching out to the family members of the victims.

“I want them to know you all don’t have to be afraid of us,” she said. “My daughter did not mean it. When she gets the opportunity to, she will give a sincere apology.”

Despite the ethnic intimidation charges, the girl’s mother told NBC10 she doesn’t believe her daughter’s actions were racially motivated.

“As you can clearly see in the video, my daughter is Muslim,” she said. “We do not carry ourselves that way. We carry ourselves with respect, modesty and humility.”

In response to the video, Philadelphia City Councilman David Oh called on SEPTA and the Philadelphia School District to increase security measures.

"There has to be a response by the police, by SEPTA school safety officers, formerly known as school police, and by SEPTA itself," Oh said. "It has a police force and we need to see them."

Chief Nestel said they are now offering students at Central High School a safe ride home with a police officer in the aftermath of the attack.

"The benefit of this is the officer can start to get to know the kids because we'll have the same officer there and we'll have an officer on a train full of kids that's coming from Central and going to South Philly," he said. "That starts today."

Nestel said the officer will meet with students at SEPTA's Olney station each day.