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Unprovoked beatings of homeless rising


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Americans did pay attention to the story of 58-year-old Jacques Pierre, a homeless man who’d been sleeping on a bench on a college campus when three teenagers woke him up, taunted him, then nearly killed him with baseball bats.

Why?

That Jan. 12, 2006, ambush in Fort Lauderdale was filmed by a surveillance camera, and broadcast worldwide.

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“For once,” says Sean Cononie, who operates a homeless shelter in that seaside city, “Americans saw with their own eyes how kids hunt down and kill homeless people as though it were a sport.”

Such “sport” has occurred elsewhere:

  • In Toms River, N.J., five high-school students were charged with beating a 50-year-old homeless man nearly to death with pipes and baseball bats — throwing hockey pucks at him for good measure — as he slept in the woods.
  • In Butte, Mont., a 53-year-old homeless man was killed at a Greyhound bus depot because he refused to give another man a cigarette, according to court records. The victim’s skull was fractured. The 22-year-old assailant received a 50-year prison sentence.
  • In Spokane, Wash., a one-legged, 50-year-old homeless man was set on fire in his wheelchair on a downtown street; he died of his burns. Police charged a 22-year-old man with first-degree murder.
  • In Nashville, Tenn., a 32-year-old homeless woman sleeping on a boat ramp was shoved into the Cumberland River, according to witnesses. Two men, ages 21 and 22, were charged with homicide in her drowning; authorities say the attack was unprovoked.

Cononie, who also publishes a monthly newspaper, “The Homeless Voice,” reported another trend:

“Kids are even starting to videotape themselves hurting homeless people. That’s something we never saw before.”

He was referring to an February incident in Corpus Christi, Texas, in which a 22-year-old, a 16-year-old and a 15-year-old describe on camera how they are going to assault a homeless man, then do so.

Image: August Felix
AP
Homeless murder victim August Felix

On the tape, the attackers kick the man in the back, grab him, and flip him around to show off his injuries, according to police. The camera, which had been stolen, was recovered by the owner, who called police once she saw the footage.

Police have arrested one of the teens, and are looking for the other two suspects. The victim suffered a concussion but survived.

Some perpetrators are even younger. In late March, a homeless day laborer was walking at night through a neighborhood of Daytona Beach, Fla., when three boys on bicycles attacked him, striking him with a concrete block.

‘Defies logic’
Two of the boys were 10 years old; the third was 17. Each has been charged with aggravated battery. “For a 10-year-old to pick up a cinder block and smash somebody’s face with it, that defies logic,” Michael Chitwood, Daytona’s police chief, later told a reporter.

Though for the past decade assaults on the homeless have dotted the U.S. map, Florida is the state where such attacks are most frequent by far, the coalition’s February report says.

Last year, the coalition documented 48 attacks in Florida, where 60,867 of the state’s 17.8 million residents are homeless, according to federal figures. By comparison, 11 attacks were counted in California, where 170,270 of that state’s 36 million people are homeless.

While some investigators believe the attacks are random, Sgt. Richard Ring, who investigated the murder of August Felix in Orlando last year, sees “a more deep-seated problem here.”


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