Wednesday, January 04, 2012

Seattle’s Good Nazis Watch Racist Black Mob Attack Couple for 4 Minutes, Without So Much as Calling 911; Racist Blacks Perform for Bus Cameras

By Nicholas Stix

Seattle Bus Attack: Full Video
November 19, 2010

 

 
[Thanks to purplesageify.]

The above video went viral at the time.

Note that as the racist attackers go to the back of the bus and see the mark, they smirk at each other, and immediately surround her. This was a planned attack, but not in the sense most people would understand.

These racist females—and they are not all teenagers, one looks to be in her thirties—are already career criminals. They have done this so many times that they only need a second or two to choose a mark and communicate that to each other. If you don’t believe me, replay the tape, and see how one immediately sat down next to the mark, and the mutual smirking among some of the five. (We can’t see all of them.)

Later:

I’ve since done some research on this case, and learned that the racist attacker whom I’d pegged as being in her thirties, Ayana Cain, was then only 19. All I can say is, that is one old-looking 19-year-old. (I have been unable to determine if this is the same Ayana Cain quoted in a previous Seattle crime story about street surveillance cameras in the violent, racist, black Rainier Valley area.)

Although four of the five have been granted anonymity, thanks to Washington’s antiquated laws on behalf of younger psychopaths, they all proved to be already career criminals, as I recognized from the video.

Not only were the five racist thugs not charged with a hate crime, the case was “disappeared” by King County authorities.

Note that the Seattle Times writers refused to name the 17-year-old attacker, but did name her 17-year-old victim. Nevertheless, the Times writers did an excellent job of digging up and reporting the thugs’ juvi, and in Cain’s case, adult background.

While the story says “0” comments up top, there are actually 497 comments that the Seattle Times’ censors permitted through.
 

Originally published Thursday, December 16, 2010 at 10:26 a.m.
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5 charged in attack on man, pregnant teen aboard bus
Five teenagers have been charged in connection with an attack on a pregnant teen and her boyfriend on a Metro bus Nov. 19.
By Sara Jean Green
Seattle Times staff reporter

Three of the five teenage girls caught on video viciously attacking a pregnant teen and her boyfriend on a Metro bus last month have significant juvenile criminal histories, mostly for assaults and thefts, according to court records.

One girl was convicted last year of attacking a woman and attempting to steal her purse, while another girl allegedly grabbed and shoved a nurse at Swedish Hospital in August. A third girl has several theft convictions, including one from early 2008 for stealing $918 worth of merchandise from the downtown Seattle Macy's store, according to court records.

On Nov. 19, the five teens — four juveniles and one adult — got on the Route 358 bus in Belltown during rush hour and made their way to the back of the packed, articulated coach, according to the King County Sheriff's Office, which is responsible for policing Metro buses, bus stops and transit stations.

Without warning, one of the suspects grabbed an MP-3 player away from 17-year-old Jessica Redmon-Beckstead, who was on the bus with her boyfriend, Jason DeCoste, 19. In the moments that followed, the suspects punched and kicked both Redmon-Beckstead and DeCoste on the bus, despite the posted signs alerting passengers that video-surveillance cameras are on board.

The Sheriff's Office provided video footage of the incident during a news briefing in Sheriff Sue Rahr's office on Thursday. "I was shocked by how vicious it was and how unprovoked it was," Rahr said of the attack.

During the incident, one of the suspects can be heard accusing DeCoste of stealing her cellphone. According to sheriff's spokesman Sgt. John Urquhart, DeCoste briefly met the girl at a party last summer and has denied taking her phone. His girlfriend, who was three months pregnant at the time of the attack, did not know any of the suspects, Urquhart said.

Redmon-Beckstead and DeCoste can be seen getting punched in the face and head several times; at one point, one of the suspects uses a bus railing to lift herself up and repeatedly kick DeCoste in the head. Three of the suspects rummage through his pockets, one of them pulling out a pack of cigarettes.

DeCoste tells the attackers that his girlfriend is pregnant, and one replies: "Nobody hit her in the stomach," while encouraging her friends to "hit her in the face."

"During the course of the video all the suspects are seen laughing during the course of the assaults and even joke about how they did not get any money from the victims.

One of the suspects is heard complaining that she broke her nail," according to charging documents filed in the case.

Quickly arrested

On the video, DeCoste and other passengers are heard yelling for the bus driver to stop the bus, and DeCoste is again punched in the face and head as he and Redmon-Beckstead get off the bus. According to the Sheriff's Office, the couple then walked to the front of the bus and notified the driver, who called police and waited for deputies to arrive.

Redmon-Beckstead needed six stitches to close a gash over her left eye, while DeCoste suffered bruising. Both told deputies they were concerned for their unborn child, charging papers say.

All five suspects got off the bus when the driver stopped. Within half an hour, deputies arrested three of them in the 8500 block of Aurora Avenue, Urquhart said.

According to Urquhart, a fourth suspect, who is 16, was arrested Nov. 30 at her house in South Seattle.

[N.S.: That’s 11 days later.]

The fifth suspect, 19-year-old Ayana Cain — who complained about breaking a nail — was arrested Dec. 7 [That’s 18 days later.] at a Belltown beauty salon, he said. Cain, a student at South Lake High School, spent four days in the King County Jail before posting bond on her $50,000 bail, jail records show.

One 16-year-old is currently on electronic home monitoring while three others — ages 17, 16, and 15 — are being held at the King County Juvenile Detention Center. The Seattle Times does not typically name juvenile-crime suspects. King County prosecutors have filed paperwork in hopes of charging the 17-year-old as an adult.

The four juveniles have been charged with second-degree robbery, and Cain was charged with second-degree assault, according to charging documents.

The suspects, who were provided ORCA bus passes by Seattle Public Schools, have had their passes revoked and are banned from riding Metro buses for a year, according to the Sheriff's Office. If they are discovered on a bus during that time, they can be arrested for criminal trespassing.

Virtues of video

During the roughly four-minute assault, no one on the bus called 911, but [Sheriff Sue] Rahr said people were probably too shocked to react.

"When a situation erupts very quickly, it takes awhile for people to respond," she said.

[Sure, if the attack had lasted for 20 seconds, but this went on for four minutes.
That’s the wrong answer. People didn’t respond out of cowardice or shadenfreude.]

Though Rahr characterized the attack as "an isolated incident" [Please!], she said emphasis [?] patrols are being assigned to Route 358 buses to ensure riders feel safe. But she pointed out that the route alone carries nearly 10,000 people each weekday and more than 3 million people a year.

Urquhart encouraged passengers who witness crimes to call 911 but not to get involved.

[If passengers got involved, this sort of thing would quickly become very rare, but there’s little chance of that happening in Seattle. It’s much too progressive. Contrast Seattle (or New York, for that matter) with Batavia, in upstate New York, where a hulking black woman, Jacquetta Simmons, 26, allegedly broke the face of 70-year-old, white Walmart cashier Grace Suozzi, on Christmas Eve (here and here). Over 100 customers and workers reportedly chased down Simmons, and cornered her until police could come and take her into custody. Batavia is clearly a retrograde backwater. Properly progressive people don’t do that sort of thing. If anything, they would tell the police that Mrs. Suozzi had attacked Miss Simmons.

Sgt. Urquhart’s advice was despicable but routine, and in Seattle entirely unnecessary, where residents always have their rationalizations for civil cowardice as handy as their Apple gadgets.]

He [Urquhart] said the bus driver "did everything right" once he became aware of the disturbance at the back of his bus — and passengers can be heard yelling for him to stop the coach.

"He did not move that bus. He kept that bus in place until police could get there and interview witnesses," which led to the quick arrest of three of the suspects, Urquhart said. "This is how it's supposed to work," he said.

[No. In a society of self-reliant citizens, those girls wouldnt’t have dared do what they did.]

The bus is one of nearly 400 Metro coaches currently equipped with state-of-the-art video equipment, which records both video and audio. Cameras will be added to another 250 buses over the next few years, Rahr said.

[Great. More gadgets, less character.]

In releasing the video of the Nov. 19 incident, Rahr said video cameras aboard buses are a deterrent to crime. [So we see.] She said there is a more than 90 percent arrest rate for crimes that are captured on video.

[Helping to solve crimes is not the same thing as being a “deterrent to crime.”]

In a Sept. 17 incident, a surveillance video helped police identify and arrest a man who allegedly punched a mentally disabled man just after stepping off the No. 7 Metro bus on Rainier Avenue South, near Mount Baker Station.

[Another crime deterred by video cameras!]

The unprovoked attack left the victim, 55, with a broken jaw and face cuts. Police arrested Raymel J. Curry, 32, who has been arrested or cited more than 50 times, on suspicion of second-degree assault.

[“Arrested or cited more than 50 times”? The arrests, citations, and video cameras have obviously had a deterrent effect on Mr. Curry. Watch the video of Curry’s attack after this story.]


Previous attacks

The 16-year-old who was arrested Nov. 30 and is still in custody was convicted of attempted first-degree robbery last year for attacking a woman outside her apartment building and trying to steal her purse.

The 16-year-old and two other girls followed Lauren Luttrell, 29, off a bus in the Ravenna neighborhood and demanded money, according to Luttrell and court records.

When Luttrell refused, the 16-year-old grabbed Luttrell by the hair and pushed her to the ground. A second girl "banged my head against the door frame a few times" and the 16-year-old delivered several kicks to her body.

The girls laughed during the assault, "which I think is messed up," Luttrell said Thursday. "They all just seemed very mean-spirited."

Luttrell wasn't surprised to hear the 16-year-old was suspected in another attack: "She was the main girl of the three who attacked me.

"Definitely I think they were enjoying it. They hadn't tried to take my purse until
they'd verbally and physically messed with me," said Luttrell.

The 16-year-old was sentenced to 15 to 36 weeks in juvenile detention, but the court records did not indicate how much time she served.

[In other words, little or none.]

In February, the 16-year-old was again arrested for possessing a stolen vehicle — and was supposed to report for drug treatment 10 days before the Nov. 19 bus assault, court records show.

The same 16-year-old and another suspect in the bus attack, who is 15, got into a fight while visiting the other 16-year-old suspect in the hospital in August, according to court records. The girls were fighting over a laptop and the 15-year-old allegedly grabbed and shoved a nurse, the records say. The 15-year-old was charged with assault.

The 17-year-old suspect has been arrested numerous times for theft for stealing from a beauty-supply store, a grocery and two department stores, including the downtown Macy's.

Seattle Times staff reporter Mike Lindblom and news researcher Miyoko Wolf contributed to this report.

Sara Jean Green: 206-515-5654 or sgreen@seattletimes.com


 
September 17, 2010 Bus Attack by Raymel Curry


 

Raymel Curry deserves, and will get, a blog item of his own.
 

[Previously, at WEJB/NSU, on Seattle:

“De-Policing in America’s Cities: Erasing the ‘Thin Blue Line’” ;

“Why is James Paroline Dead?” ;

“Three Race Murders in Seattle” ;

“Race Hustler Alert at Wikipedia! Someone Has been Making Mischief Regarding Maurice Clemmons’ Lakewood Massacre”;

“Seattle: Diversity Trainers Wage War on Policing”;

“Ex-Cons May Gain Affirmative Action Status in Madhouse Seattle”;

“Seattle's Meanest Streets (Updated!) ”;

“Seattle Cop Rails Against Affirmative Action Policing”;

“Seattle: Baby-Faced ‘Tuba Man’ Killer, Billy Chambers, Strikes Again”;

“Stone Killer Billy Chambers, Who Murdered Seattle’s Beloved ‘Tuba Man,’ Edward McMichael, is Undercharged Yet Again in His Newest Alleged Crime”;

“War on Competent, White, Male, King County, WA Prosecutor James Konat Continues Apace: NAACP Demands His Dismissal, and He is Removed from Two Murder Cases”;

“Is It Possible for Blacks to Have a Good Time Without Bloodshed? Seattle Reader Asks if ‘Bite of Seattle’ Festival Could Become Blood of Seattle”;

“A Riot in San Francisco, with More to Come! Cop Shoots Innocent Black Honor Student (from Seattle), Kenneth Wade Harding, 19, in the Back; the Brothers are (as Always) on War Footing”;

“Seattle Blacks Believe That They Can Resist Arrest, and Aid and Abet Those Resisting Arrest with Impunity Against White Policemen…”;

“Billy Chambers, Racist Killer of Seattle’s Beloved ‘Tuba Man,’ Edward McMichael, Pleads Guilty, Gets Minimal Sentence, in Attempted Murder of Witness”;

“One of Tuba Man’s Killers Goes to the Big House, but for a Mere 22 Months for Attempted Murder”;

“For Alleged Reporter Levi Pulkinnen at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, There are No Black Murderers of Whites, Only ‘Accused’ Ones”; and

“AOL/Huffington Post and AP Manage the Black Air Jordan Riots Story”;

“Seattle: Since Blacks Support Black Criminals, City Needs Surveillance Cameras Everywhere”;

“Seattle: Nameless, Faceless, Raceless Suspect Arrested for Murder of Faceless, Raceless Victim in Belltown”;

“Belltown Murder: Still Raceless and Faceless in Seattle”; and

“Cause and Effect? Seattle Reader Writes on Military Academy Diversity and Rape, and the Seattle Air Jordan Riots.”

6 comments:

  1. One month before the attack, in an article about surveillance cameras:

    "But Ayana Cain said it feels like an invasion of privacy.

    " 'You want to be able to freely walk down the street or go to school without feeling like the cops are just watching you,' she said."

    http://www.komonews.com/news/local/108548794.html

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  2. I hope to goodness that someone yelled at the top of their lungs: STOP THE BUS -- THERE'S A BIG FIGHT -- CALL THE COPS. Did no one call 9-1-1? Shocking. Four minutes feels like a very long time when one i under attack, from what I've heard.

    The young white man was struck and kicked up to 10 times or more, right? He showed tremendous self-restraint.

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  3. I guess we all need to decide ahead of time, what we're going to do when and if we encounter an assault like this.

    I'm ashamed to admit that in the past, I "froze in my tracks" as a crime was being committed in front of me. Even though I was just a skinny, naive teenager, I should have done something. (It's not a pretty story, and I'm not proud of it.)

    I'm no hero today. But speaking as an adult, I know I don't want to watch somebody get assaulted by creeps, suffer any kind of injury, and then have to live with myself, knowing I'd done nothing to help.

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  4. Here in Oakland I have been attacked by a black AC Transit bus driver. He held up the bus while making comments about me being an "Estudius(sic) bitch!" Because I did not respond to his up and down ogling of me when I got on the bus. At every red light he would stand up and abuse me verbally, so badly that black guys on the bus started to tell him to "Just drive the bus!"

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  5. Anon January 4, 2012 11:02 a.m.,

    That is exactly the article I was referring to!

    ReplyDelete
  6. jeigheff,

    I hear you. I can recall one such incident myself, off the top of my head. And I do not expect civilians to take on a mob of five kids, even if they were girls (let alone the 6'4" man of the second case). But probably 90 percent of the people on the first bus mentioned had cellphones, for crying out loud, and I'm sure it didn't take four minutes for the driver to realize that something terribly wrong was going on. And in the second case, the man was walking back and forth, in an almost empty bus for 30 minutes, shouting about what he was going to do, yet the driver did nothing until after the man had almost killed someone. Based on what I've been reading about Seattle buses, and my own experiences in NYC, I suspect that at least one of the drivers in the two stories in this blog were racist blacks.

    ReplyDelete