Chattanooga Times Free Press

3 charged with child cruelty after video of extreme haircut goes viral

- BY ASIA SIMONE BURNS

“When you see a young person being abused like this — just so unnecessar­y — it was difficult to watch. I think for a lot of the investigat­ors it was the same way. It was an emotional case, and clearly it was for the members of the community as well.”

– ATLANTA POLICE SPOKESMAN SGT. JOHN CHAFEE

Atlanta police have arrested three people on child abuse charges after a video emerged last month appearing to show a young boy being hit and ridiculed by an adult who makes references to sexual orientatio­n.

Jordan Jarrode Richards-Nwankwo, 18, Lorkeyla Jamia Spencer, 19, and Brittney Monique Mills, 35, are all charged with cruelty to children in connection with the video, which went viral after horrified viewers circulated the post showing the child being given an extreme haircut and then being repeatedly struck in the head. Richards-Nwankwo faces an additional count of battery.

They were taken into custody Friday. Investigat­ors first learned about the video June 17, Atlanta police spokesman Sgt. John Chafee said.

“Investigat­ors were made aware of a video posted on social media that depicted what appeared to be a young male being abused,” he said. “And it appeared that he was being abused because of his sexual orientatio­n.”

The video shows the boy “with his hair shaved beyond the hairline,” according to a police report. The word “gay” was shaved into the side of his head, the report said.

“The child was being yelled at by a male that appeared to be an adult,” the report said. “The male was yelling at the child and hitting him in the head stating ‘you still doing gay [expletive]. You think I cut this in your head for no reason?’ Then he slaps the child with an open hand on the side of his head while holding the top of the child’s head with his opposing hand.”

The following day, a second video of the same child was posted to social media, according to the police report.

“This second video was the child with a hat on his head stating that he was not abused,” the police report said. “In the background you can hear a male telling the child ‘[expletive] talk’ in a threatenin­g manner, then the child continues to say he is not abused and that he was being punished.”

While The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on is not publishing either video in order to guard the privacy of the victim, authoritie­s described them as being hard to watch.

“When you see a young person being abused like this — just so unnecessar­y — it was difficult to watch,” Chafee said. “I think for a lot of the investigat­ors it was the same way. It was an emotional case, and clearly it was for the members of the community as well.”

The video that showed the child being hit and punched was met with a massive push from the community, law enforcemen­t and the Georgia Department of Human Services to find out from where it had originated.

Gaye Magazine, a digital media outlet that chiefly focuses on the LGBTQIA community, received “numerous direct messages” with informatio­n after it posted about the video, the police report said. Chafee said when police were notified of the social media post’s existence, they immediatel­y began trying to determine where the video had been filmed and who was involved.

“We actually got a lot of feedback from members of the community who were able to help us identify the location and some of the people involved,” he said. “Investigat­ors at that same time were doing that same work confirming the address and those involved.”

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