Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

VIGIL TAKES STAND AGAINST HATRED

Violence: Elected and religious leaders mourn victims of Buffalo, Laguna Woods shootings

- From staff and news services

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and the Los Angeles Civil and Human Rights and Equity Department hosted a vigil at L.A.'s First AME Church on Monday, standing alongside Black and Asian American/ Pacific Islander leaders in response to this month's deadly, hate-inspired attacks in Buffalo and Laguna Woods.

“In Los Angeles there is no room for hate, and we denounce the plague of racism and violence that has taken so many lives,” Garcetti said. “We come together in sorrow and anger, but also with purpose — to commit to fighting back with the love and belonging that define our City of Angels.”

The department's executive director, Capri Maddox, in her speech said, “These deadly attacks were not isolated incidents. Hate crimes and racially motivated violence against many communitie­s is rising in the U.S., including right here in Los Angeles. We need to stand together and make it known that when they come for one of us, they come for all of us.”

The gathered group lit a candle for each of the 11 victims killed during the two shootings: 10 in Buffalo on May 14 and one in Laguna Woods on May 15.

Speaking of the loved ones of those killed in the shootings, Bishop John Taylor of the Episcopal Dioceses of Los Angeles declared: “We will weep with them. If we keep a place in our hearts for them, we will work harder to redeem their suffering, by decisive and just actions.”

Killed in the Laguna Woods shooting was 52-year-old Dr. John Cheng of Aliso Viejo, who authoritie­s say charged the gunman inside the Geneva Presbyteri­an Church, saving the lives of congregant­s at a luncheon honoring a returning pastor. Thanks to Cheng's bravery, other congregant­s were able to tackle the gunman, ultimately hog-tying him with an electrical cord.

Authoritie­s have said that the accused gunman, David Wenwei Chou, was motivated to carry out the shooting due to a longstandi­ng grievance against Taiwan over tensions with China. Chou, a Taiwanese immigrant, lived in Las Vegas, but targeted the congregati­on in Laguna Woods on Sunday afternoon for

reasons that are still under investigat­ion.

That shooting came one day after a supermarke­t in a predominan­tly Black neighborho­od in Buffalo was targeted by a heavily armed shooter who killed 10 people and wounded three others. Authoritie­s arrested 18-year-old Payton Gendron in that crime, which they said was racially motivated. Eleven of the 13 victims were Black.

Experts continue to decry the current spike in the number of hate-driven conflicts — from events as big and horrific as mass killings to as personally intimidati­ng as name-calling — as nothing short of a national crime wave. In the most shocking incidents, residents have been targeted for mass murder because of their religion, ethnicity or race.

The two most notable hate crimes committed this month — the killings of 10 Black Americans in Buffalo and the killing of one Taiwanese American man in Orange County — hint at the increasing­ly random nature of hate as a catalyst for violent crime.

“What happened in Laguna Woods is part of a bigger story right now,” Brian Levin, who teaches criminal

Monday's vigil at the First AME Church in Los Angeles was dedicated in memory of shooting victims on May 14 and 15 and a denunciati­on of hate-fueled violence. justice at Cal State San Bernardino and runs the independen­t Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, said last week. “It's everywhere.”

“This is a manifestat­ion of the ugliest part of humanity in our country today,” Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes said last week. “At some point, we have to put aside our difference­s and focus on our similariti­es.”

Some experts suggest that a new wave of hate is growing, propelled by the internet and the nation's increasing­ly divisive political climate. Hate crime in the nation's 10 biggest cities surged 24% during the first quarter of this year when compared with the first quarter of 2021, according to data collected by Levin's group, the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino.

This year's early jump comes after a 39% increase, year-over-year reported in 2021 — and that rise came after a 13% jump in 2020. In the first two years of the pandemic, hate crime in big cities soared by 54%. A crime that 20 years ago was rarely reported — a physical or verbal assault aimed at a person because of their race, ethnicity, gender, religion or sexual orientatio­n — has become closer to routine.

The current hate crime wave mostly holds to historic norms — FBI data shows Black Americans continue to be targeted for hate-driven violence, typically by White Americans, more than any other group.

The data does suggest one big shift from historic norms, however: a huge increase in violence aimed at Asian Americans. FBI data shows anti-Asian hate crimes nationally more than tripled over the past two years.

The Los Angeles Civil and Human Rights and Equity Department launched an anti-hate campaign in 2021 aimed at spreading the word about how to report hate crimes and incidents.

The campaign encourages people who see or experience a hate crime or hate incident to report it to the Los Angeles Police Department or to an L.A. County Crisis Care Coordinato­r by calling 211 or 311 for hate incidents. Crimes in progress should be reported to 911.

Among other attendees at the vigil were Council Members Curren Price and Paul Koretz, Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore, First AME Church Pastor the Rev. J. Edgar Boyd, the Rev. Najuma SmithPolla­rd, the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles Deacon Daniel Tamm, the Rev. Sam Shin of the Korean American Christian Coalition, Executive Director of Asian Americans Advancing Justice Los Angeles Connie Chung Joe, Bishop of Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles John Harvey Taylor, Executive Director of Intelect-Love-Mercy Foundation Umar Hakim Dey, Executive Director of MuslimJewi­sh NewGround Aziza Hasan and representa­tives from Women Against Gun Violence.

 ?? PHOTOS BY SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Laura Drino, in red, an attorney for Women Against Gun Violence, shares the story of a victim of the May 14mass shooting at a Buffalo, N.Y., supermarke­t during Monday's vigil at the First AME Church in Los Angeles.
PHOTOS BY SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Laura Drino, in red, an attorney for Women Against Gun Violence, shares the story of a victim of the May 14mass shooting at a Buffalo, N.Y., supermarke­t during Monday's vigil at the First AME Church in Los Angeles.
 ?? ?? Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore, right, lights a candle Monday during the First AME Church's vigil.
Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore, right, lights a candle Monday during the First AME Church's vigil.
 ?? SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ??
SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER

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