Greenwich Time (Sunday)

Man charged with hate crime, assault

- By John Nickerson

STAMFORD — Stamford police have charged a Stamford man, who was caught on video berating a group of young Black and Latino men at Cove Island Park last month, with a hate crime and multiple counts of assault.

Steven Mike Dudek, 57, who police say sprayed four of the men with pepper spray, was videoed shouting at the group and then calling police to report he was being harassed by a “bunch of Black men.”

One of the men allegedly pepper sprayed was an offduty Bridgeport police officer.

On Thursday, Stamford police charged Dudek with four counts of second-degree assault, first-degree intimidati­on based on bigotry or bias and falsely reporting an incident to police, according to Stamford Police Capt. Richard Conklin and Lt. Tom Scanlon.

Dudek turned himself in to police after becoming aware that they had obtained an arrest warrant in his name and was released after posting $25,000 bond, according to authoritie­s.

Police said Dudek approached the group of men at about 4 p.m. on June 20 and accused them of wanting to use the boat ramp at the park even though they were not authorized to do so. City rules allow only those who have purchased seasonal slips at the park to launch their motorboats there.

The men had a motorboat hitched to a pickup truck parked in the lot. It was was not backed up to the ramp. An attorney for the five younger men has said they had planned to launch their boat from West Beach, where anyone, provided they have a pass, can launch a motorboat.

Dudek’s comments included racial connotatio­ns and escalated into an assault in which Dudek used a chemical spray against four of the men, police said.

The video that was widely shared on social media does not show Dudek using a spray. But a circulated still photograph that appears to be from the same incident allegedly shows him using one.

Dudek’s Stamford criminal defense attorney Steven DeLeo said because the case is still under investigat­ion and he has been told police are still talking to witnesses, he declined comment. A message left for Dudek was not immediatel­y returned. He has not returned several messages left for him in recent weeks.

Attorney Darnell Crosland, who is representi­ng the five younger men, called the incident a “hate-filled attack” and said, “Stamford is better than that.”

“The arc of the moral universe may bend toward justice, but only if we bend it that way. What happened to George Floyd has sparked a flame in all of us that enough is enough when it comes to injustices based on race,” said Crosland. “To say ‘I’m not racist’ is not enough. We have an affirmativ­e duty to speak out for justice, to work to bring it into being and to confront and actively oppose racism in all its forms.”

Stamford Police Chief Tim Shaw last week said the two sides involved in the incident told very different stories following the altercatio­n, and police took time to investigat­e.

“While this case deals with a person who has complained about other individual­s illegally using the boat ramp, we do believe that in this specific case, based on the totality of the informatio­n we have collected so far, the event escalated into a racial incident,” Shaw said last week.

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