New York Daily News

‘She meant to kill me’

Bx. woman terrorized after umbrella attack

- BY MARCO POGGIO, ROCCO PARASCANDO­LA AND JOHN ANNESE

A teenager ranting about coronaviru­s while bashing a Chinese woman’s head with an umbrella had murder in her heart, the terrified victim told the Daily News on Monday.

Anna Ng, 51, of the Bronx, said she needed four stitches March 28 to close the gash on her head after a racist attack that left her fearful she or her children could be targeted again.

“She meant to kill me. She wanted to hurt me,” Ng said of the umbrella-wielding bigot.

Ng, a stay-athome mother of three who was born in China but raised in New

York, is one of 11

Asian victims targeted in coronaviru­s-related hate crimes this year.

She had just come out of a BJ’s Wholesale Club in the Bronx and was waiting for a Bx13 bus when four teenage girls came out of the store and confronted her. One of them held a cake she’d brought from inside the store, while the other three kept asking her if she was Chinese.

“I said yes,” Ng said. “They kept calling me a ‘Chinese coronaviru­s.’ ”

Offended, Ng said she uttered “b—-” in response, but didn’t confront them further, then sat in one of the front seats when the bus arrived.

The teens piled into the back of the bus; one kept yelling the same slur at her, she said.

When the teenagers got off the bus at 166th St. near Ogden Ave., one struck her with an umbrella, ripping flesh and drawing a gush of blood, she said. The others took photos.

“They kept calling me ‘coronaviru­s’ after they cracked my head open,” she said, holding back tears. “After she got off and she hit me, she was still calling me names.” Police arrested three 15year-old girls near the scene, charging them with hate crime assaults, menacing and harassment. A fourth teen remained at large; police released a photo of the young attacker Sunday.

A surveillan­ce image shows a young woman wearing a pink headband and black jacket, leaning over a bar on the bus to attack the victim. Police ask anyone with informatio­n to call Crime Stoppers at (800) 577-TIPS.

Ng, who is disabled and cannot read or write, said she still has headaches from the vicious attack. Normally, she said, her daughter goes out shopping with her, but that day, she went alone.

“She would have freaked out,” Ng said.

She’s never been the victim of a hate crime before, she said.

“All my friends are black, Spanish, Dominicans, Puerto Ricans, Arabic, whatever,” Ng said. “This was my first time.”

From Jan. 1 to April 5, 2019, the NYPD reported three antiAsian hate crimes.

So far this year, the police have seen 23 hate crimes where the suspect was motivated by more than one bias — a 360% increase from last year. In 11 of those 23 cases, the victims were targeted because they were Asian and the suspect was motivated by the coronaviru­s, cops said. Police have made arrests in seven of those incidents.

Nationwide, more than 1,100 Asian-Americans have been targeted in a variety of coronaviru­s-related discrimina­tion incidents since March 17, said the Asian Pacific Policy & Planning Council.

Ng said she’s scared she could be attacked again, and her children share that fear.

“When I go out, I’m afraid of people attacking me,” Ng said. “My children won’t go out now. After what happened, they would not go out.”

 ?? MARCO POGGIO/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS ?? Suspect (below) in assault on Anna Ng (r.) left mom of three fearful she or children could be targeted again.
MARCO POGGIO/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Suspect (below) in assault on Anna Ng (r.) left mom of three fearful she or children could be targeted again.
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