Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Cops: Woman lied about threats by Trump supporters

- By Jaweed Kaleem and Barbara Demick Los Angeles Times Jaweed Kaleem reported from Los Angeles and Barbara Demick from New York. jaweed.kaleem@latimes.com

NEW YORK — A young Muslim woman in New York who said she was threatened on a subway train by Donald Trump supporters made the story up, according to police.

New York police arrested Yasmin Seweid, 18, on Wednesday and charged her with obstructin­g government­al administra­tion and filing a false report, according to a statement.

Seweid told police that on Dec. 1 three drunken white men began shouting, “Trump! Trump!” to her while attempting to snatch the hijab off her head.

The story was widely reported and was featured on the front page of the New York Daily News with the headline “Hate and the City.”

New York news media reported Thursday that Seweid made up the story to avoid being punished for staying out past curfew. She appeared in court with a shaved head, which the Daily News said was punishment by her parents for the incident. The Baruch College student faces up to a year in jail for each of the charges.

The Daily News denounced Seweid for wasting the resources of the police department and for hurting fellow Muslims.

“The next time a real victim of real hate comes forward, more cynics will scoff,” the newspaper wrote.

Seweid’s allegation was among a series of reported incidents after the election in which attackers invoked the president-elect’s name.

Since Nov. 8, civil rights groups have documented hundreds of incidents around the country that targeted Muslims, blacks, Jews, Latinos, immigrants and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r people.

Last month the FBI reported a 67 percent increase in hate crimes against Muslims in 2015 compared with the previous year.

A handful of those reports have been proven to be false.

In one case, police said a female Muslim student at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette falsely reported that men attacked her on campus the day after the election, took her wallet and removed her hijab.

In another incident, police said an African-American man in Volusia County, Fla., taped a note with the words “KKK” and “Trump” to his girlfriend’s mailbox, then threw a brick through her car window and spilled gasoline on her back seat because he was mad at her over a child custody battle. The man made it look like a hate crime to deter police from investigat­ing him.

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