Miami Herald

Man who hurled racial slurs at black teens pleads not guilty to assault charges

- BY DAVID OVALLE dovalle@miamiheral­d.com

The man accused of pulling a gun on black teenage protesters on Martin Luther King Jr. Day and then using racial slurs pleaded not guilty on Wednesday.

Neither Mark Bartlett nor his attorneys appeared in court for his arraignmen­t, but Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Alberto Milian accepted a written plea of not guilty to felony charges filed under Florida’s hate-crime sentencing “enhancemen­t” law. Milian, however, ordered Bartlett and his lawyers to appear in court next Tuesday as prosecutor­s seek to increase the amount of bond he must post to remain free while awaiting trial.

Wednesday’s court hearing was filled with supporters of the teenagers, including more than a dozen women who belong to the Unrepresen­ted People’s Positive Action Council, a group that advocates for minority communitie­s. “We want the young people to know we’re here to support them,” said the organizati­on’s head, Betty Ferguson, a former Miami-Dade County commission­er.

Outside, a truck with Bartlett’s jail mugshot blown up on the side of a billboardl­ike cab circled the MiamiDade criminal courthouse. “Mark Bartlett points guns at kids calls them n---ers convict this criminal,” it read.

The confrontat­ion between Bartlett and the teens was captured on a bystander video that went viral.

The episode unfolded on Jan. 21, when a group of teens were protesting a lack of affordable housing in Liberty City by blocking the roadway in downtown Miami near the Brickell Bridge. The teens were on bicycles.

An argument erupted between one of the teens and Bartlett’s girlfriend, who claimed the protester ran over her foot. Bartlett ran over from his car, gun in hand, yelling, “Get out of here, you piece of s---” before hurling the racial slurs.

A bystander called police officers, who caught up with Bartlett and arrested him, charging him with carrying a concealed weapon.

On Tuesday, Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle said Bartlett would be charged with three counts of aggravated assault, enhanced under Florida’s hate-crime law. The law stiffens the penalty for crimes committed “with prejudice.”

His defense lawyer, Jayne Weintraub, said prosecutor­s bowed to “political pressure” and that Bartlett was rushing to defend his girlfriend, Dana Scalione. “Mark went to protect Dana and extract her from the mob surroundin­g and taunting her,” Weintraub said. “It would not have mattered if these people were red, white, or blue. This was not a hate crime.”

David Ovalle: 305-376-3379, @davidovall­e305

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