The Guardian (USA)

Wisconsin man charged with hate crime in acid attack on Hispanic man

- Associated Press

A 61-year-old white Milwaukee man accused of throwing acid on a Hispanic American man’s face will be charged with a hate crime, prosecutor­s announced Wednesday.

Prosecutor­s filed one charge against Clifton Blackwell — first-degree reckless injury — but added hate crime and use of a dangerous weapon. The two sentencing enhancers could add 10 years in prison if he’s convicted of first-degree reckless injury, which is punishable by up to 25 years.

The victim, Mahud Villalaz, 42, said his attacker approached him near a restaurant Friday night and confronted him about being parked too close to a bus stop, according to charging documents. Prosecutor­s said Blackwell then asked, “Why did you invade my country?” and “Why don’t you respect my laws?”

Villalaz said he moved his car but that Blackwell continued to berate him, calling him “illegal” and telling him to “go back, go back”, followed by an expletive. Villalaz said he called Blackwell a racist, also using an expletive. Villalaz said Blackwell threw the acid on him after Villalaz said “everyone come from somewhere first”.

Surveillan­ce video from the restaurant recorded the attack, which left Villalaz

with second-degree burns on his face. Villalaz is a US citizen who immigrated from Peru.

The attack on Villalaz comes at a time when the Anti-Defamation

League says extreme anti-immigrant views have become part of the political mainstream in recent years through sharp rhetoric by anti-immigratio­n groups and politician­s, including Donald Trump.

Blackwell does not yet have an attorney, according to court records.

Blackwell’s family said he’s a military veteran who came to Milwaukee to seek help for an undetermin­ed medical issue. His mother, Jacqueline P Blackwell, of California, told the Journal Sentinel he had sought care with the Department of Veterans Affairs in Milwaukee for post-traumatic stress.

“I was comfortabl­e that he was getting good care with the VA,” she told the newspaper.

His brother, Arthur Eugene Blackwell of Evergreen, Colorado, told the AP that Clifton served nearly four years in the US marines and was stationed at the Panama Canal around the time Manuel Noriega was captured and removed in 1990. A marine official told AP that the branch doesn’t have a record matching Blackwell’s name and birthdate.

State court records show Blackwell was convicted in a 2006 Rusk county case of false imprisonme­nt and pointing a gun at a person in a case where he held four hunters at gunpoint because they were on his property.

 ??  ?? Mahud Villalaz, 42, of Milwaukee gestures to the second-degree burns on his face at a news conference one day after a man threw acid at him outside a restaurant on Milwaukee’s south side. Photograph: Sophie Carson/AP
Mahud Villalaz, 42, of Milwaukee gestures to the second-degree burns on his face at a news conference one day after a man threw acid at him outside a restaurant on Milwaukee’s south side. Photograph: Sophie Carson/AP

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