The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hate crime label clear to many Asian Americans

Advocates calling for strong indictment of all anti-asian violence.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@coxinc.com

Whether or not the massacre that spanned three Atlanta-area spas last week is prosecuted as a hate crime will, ultimately, be a legal calculatio­n.

Prosecutor­s from Cherokee and Fulton counties — and perhaps from the federal Department of Justice — will decide what they can prove about the shooter’s motives, what they can’t, and proceed from there.

But for many Asian-americans, the decision will represent much, much more.

They have no doubt that race played a role when Robert Aaron Long allegedly killed eight people, including six women of Korean or Chinese descent. They say that charging him under Georgia’s new hate crimes statute would amount to a full-throated indictment of all anti-asian violence — while also serving, in a painful way, as confirmati­on of their right to exist as human beings worthy of protection.

“The resounding feeling is there needs to be a very large, forceful,

impactful statement,” said Long Tran, 44, who owns a coffee shop in Peachtree Corners. “Kind of like setting an example that this won’t be tolerated in Georgia.”

There are still many unanswered questions about the shootings at Youngs Asian Massage, Gold Spa, and Aromathera­py Spa.

Some experts have agreed there’s likely enough to charge Long under Georgia’s hate crime statute, which includes sentence enhancers for race-, sexand gender-driven offenses, among others. But investigat­ors have yet to publicly assign a motive and a hate crime decision could be a long way off yet.

In a statement released Friday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Atlanta said it was “fully supporting the state investigat­ion into the tragic events of March 16th, while independen­tly assessing whether the shootings involved a federal hate crime.”

“Experience­d civil rights

prosecutor­s and agents are assessing all of the evidence and will continue to examine all evidence related to the shooter’s motivation,” the statement said.

Meanwhile, the public discourse has been troubling for the Asian community.

Long purportedl­y told authoritie­s that he killed eight people because he was a sex addict seeking to eliminate temptation. Some have used the suspect’s assertions

to dismiss any suggestion­s of racial animus at play.

Some conservati­ve politician­s and talk show pundits have accused those pointing to racism of rushing to judgment and driving further racial division in the country. U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk, a Republican whose district includes the Cherokee County area, denounced the shooting but told one publicatio­n that it was “just a mental health issue.”

Asian Americans say comments like that hurt, especially amid a nationwide rise in anti-asian violence that’s been largely fueled by rhetoric surroundin­g the origin of the coronaviru­s.

Jing Su, a 35-year-old first-generation Chinese immigrant living Suwanee, is not an activist. But she attended — and spoke passionate­ly at — a vigil last week hosted by a new coalition of civic leaders called the Atlanta Korean American Committee Against Asian Hate Crimes.

“If it’s not a hate crime, why did [Long] go to three Asian stores to do what he wanted to do, to kill people without even knowing their names?” Su said.

Natalie Hamlett, a 51-yearold Atlantan of Korean descent, also said it’s important that the shootings be treated as a hate crime. Asian minority groups make up about 7% of metro Atlanta’s population, but community members often feel invisible.

Hamlett said when she told her 85-year-old mother about the shootings last week, the older woman said it was terrible. What was left unsaid, Hamlett could tell from her tone, was this: “But they’re not going to do anything about it.”

Georgia’s hate crimes statute was created last summer after the death of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man allegedly hunted down and killed by white men in Brunswick. If it’s prosecuted as such, last week’s shootings may be the first test of the new law.

Groups like Asian Americans Advancing Justice and many others have not shied away from calling the shootings a hate crime.

Moments after leaving the Friday funeral of Xiaojie Tan, the owner of Youngs Asian Massage, Georgia NAACP president Rev. James “Major” Woodall said her death and those of the five other slain women were the very definition of hate.

“Regardless of his stated intentions, he targeted them because they were Asian, because they were women and because they worked in a spa. That constitute­s a hate crime,” Woodall said. “That is violence against women. He intentiona­lly went to this location because he wanted to murder these people, because he hated them.”

Georgia State Rep. Bee Nguyen, D-atlanta, reiterated her call for a formal hate crimes probe during a recent panel discussion hosted by the Atlanta Press Club.

“We don’t require an admission by the suspect to say this is a hate crime,” Nguyen said.

Asian-americans who spoke to the AJC said that, admission or not, the post-shootings discourse has been oversimpli­fied and unnecessar­ily painful.

Hamlett said she “went from being horribly angry to bursting into tears” last week when she heard a spokesman for the Cherokee County Sheriff ’s Office describe the alleged shooter as having had “a bad day.”

Asked about those comments after her appearance at Thursday night’s vigil, Su pointed to her chest.

It felt — feels — like another gunshot, she said.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Members of the Atlanta Korean American Committee against Asian Hate Crimes hold signs at a vigil for victims of Atlantaare­a spa shootings.
ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Members of the Atlanta Korean American Committee against Asian Hate Crimes hold signs at a vigil for victims of Atlantaare­a spa shootings.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Nikki Cushard and Michelle Mady (right) attend a vigil for victims of the Atlanta-area spa shootings. Many Asian Americans say a nationwide rise in anti-asian violence has been largely fueled by rhetoric surroundin­g the origin of the coronaviru­s.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Nikki Cushard and Michelle Mady (right) attend a vigil for victims of the Atlanta-area spa shootings. Many Asian Americans say a nationwide rise in anti-asian violence has been largely fueled by rhetoric surroundin­g the origin of the coronaviru­s.

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