Los Angeles Times

Asian American woman attacked in Culver City

An Asian American woman walking to work was punched by a man, police said.

- By Faith E. Pinho

Police say man hit victim in the head and shouted obscenitie­s and racial comments in a possible hate crime.

Culver City police are investigat­ing a possible hate crime after a man assaulted an Asian American woman on a sidewalk Monday.

The woman was walking west in the 13300 block of Washington Boulevard just after 1 a.m. heading to work, police said.

A man approached her and asked for a cigarette, according to a Culver City news release. She said she didn’t have one and began to walk away. Surveillan­ce footage shows that she kept her gaze forward, but the man kept walking beside her.

“So what, you can’t say hi to a motherf— white boy?” he asked. Police said he referred to her as an “Asian motherf—.”

Then he punched her on the right side of her head, causing her to fall into the street. As she moaned, he continued to yell.

“B—! You know what I said to you?” he said, standing over her. “I said, ‘Good morning,’ b—!”

He then walked away, headed west on Washington Boulevard. The woman was treated for laceration­s to her right ear, police said.

The incident Monday marks the latest in a wave of attacks on Asian Americans across the country during the coronaviru­s pandemic, which some have blamed on Asians because of its origins in China.

A recent study found a nationwide spike of 164% in reports of anti-Asian hate crimes in the first quarter of 2021 compared with the same period last year.

A hate crime is an attack motivated by race, gender or other protected characteri­stics.

The Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino report showed that the number of hate crimes against Asian Americans in the first quarter increased from five to 12 in San Francisco. In Los Angeles, there were nine hate crimes in the first quarter of 2021, compared with five during the same period last year.

Advocacy organizati­on Stop AAPI Hate released another report last month showing the breadth of the attacks: name-calling, spitting, pushing, hitting and other incidents involving racial slurs.

The Culver City Police Department asked anyone with informatio­n about the Washington Boulevard attack to contact the detective bureau at (310) 253-6300.

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