Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Suspect in attack on Asian American woman is arrested

- By Michael R. Sisak

A parolee convicted of killing his mother nearly two decades ago was arrested on assault and hate crime charges in the attack on an Asian American woman in New York City, police said Wednesday.

Police said Brandon Elliot, 38, is the man seen on surveillan­ce video kicking and stomping the woman near Times Square on Monday. They said Elliot was living at a hotel that serves as a homeless shelter a few blocks from the scene of the attack. He was taken into custody at the hotel around midnight. Tips from the public led to his apprehensi­on, police said.

Elliot was convicted of stabbing his mother to death in the Bronx in 2002, when he was 19. He was released from prison in 2019 and is on lifetime parole. The parole board had previously twice denied his release. His record also included an arrest for robbery in 2000.

“For the life of me, I don’t understand why we are releasing or pushing people out of prison — not to give them second chances, but to put them into homeless facilities or shelters, or in this case a hotel — and expect good outcomes,” Police Commission­er Dermot Shea said at a news conference Wednesday. “We need real opportunit­ies. We need real safety nets.”

Elliot, who is Black, faces charges of assault as a hate crime, attempted assault as a hate crime, assault and attempted assault in Monday’s attack. It wasn’t immediatel­y known whether he had a lawyer who could speak on his behalf. He was expected to be arraigned by video Wednesday.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. said prosecutor­s will seek to have Elliot jailed without bail pending trial. He faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted, Vance said.

A law-enforcemen­t official identified the victim as 65-year-old Vilma Kari. The official was not authorized to speak publicly and did so on condition of anonymity. Kari’s daughter told The New York Times that she emigrated from the Philippine­s several decades ago.

Kari, who was repeatedly kicked and stomped,

suffered serious injuries, including a fractured pelvis, the law-enforcemen­t official said. She was discharged from the hospital on Tuesday, a hospital spokespers­on said. Kari has been speaking to police, Shea said.

Philippine Ambassador to the U.S. Jose Manuel Romualdez said the victim is Filipina American.

The country’s foreign secretary, Teodoro Locsin Jr., condemned the attack, writing on Twitter, “This is gravely noted and will influence

Philippine foreign policy.” He didn’t elaborate how. The Philippine­s and United States are longtime treaty allies, but Philippine leader Rodrigo Duterte is a vocal critic of U.S. security policies who has moved to terminate the key agreement that allows large-scale military exercises with U.S. forces in the Philippine­s.

“I might as well say it, so no one on the other side can say, ‘We didn’t know you took racial brutality against Filipinos at all seriously.’ We do,” Locsin said.

Kari was walking to church in midtown Manhattan when police said Elliot kicked her in the stomach, knocked her to the ground, stomped on her face, shouted anti-Asian slurs and told her, “You don’t belong here,” before casually walking away as onlookers watched.

Shea called it a “completely unprovoked violent attack on an innocent, defenseles­s woman.”

“This brave woman belongs here,” Vance said. “Asian American New Yorkers belong here. Everyone belongs here.”

Monday’s attack, among the latest in the national spike in anti-Asian hate crimes, drew widespread condemnati­on and concerns about the failure of bystanders to intervene. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio called the attack “absolutely disgusting and outrageous” and said it was “absolutely unacceptab­le” that witnesses didn’t help the woman.

The attack happened just weeks after the mass shooting in Atlanta that left eight people dead, six of them women of Asian descent, and just a few days after a 65-year-old Asian American woman in the same midtown Manhattan neighborho­od was threatened and heckled with anti-Asian slurs. The surge in violence has been linked in part to misplaced blame for the coronaviru­s pandemic and former President Donald Trump’s use of terms like “Chinese virus.”

Monday’s attack happened in the late morning in front of a luxury apartment building in Hell’s Kitchen, the predominan­tly white neighborho­od west of Times Square. Two workers inside the building who appeared to be security guards were seen on video witnessing the attack but failing to come to the woman’s aid. One of them was seen closing the building door as the woman was on the ground.

The building’s management company said they were suspended pending an investigat­ion. The workers’ union said they called for help immediatel­y.

Residents of the building defended the workers Wednesday in their letter to the management company and the media.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York City Police Department Officer Rodney Hierro keeps an eye on pedestrian­s and vendors along a busy section of Main Street in Flushing, a largely Asian American neighborho­od, on Tuesday. Police have stepped up patrols in this neighborho­od and others amid the rash of anti-Asian violence across the United States.
KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York City Police Department Officer Rodney Hierro keeps an eye on pedestrian­s and vendors along a busy section of Main Street in Flushing, a largely Asian American neighborho­od, on Tuesday. Police have stepped up patrols in this neighborho­od and others amid the rash of anti-Asian violence across the United States.

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