WEEKEND REWIND: Port Angeles police investigating assault as hate crime

()

()

PORT ANGELES — Police are investigating a reported assault by an 18- to 19-year-old white male as a hate crime, interim Police Chief Brian Smith said Thursday.

According to a police report, the victim of the 2:30 a.m. attack Sunday is a black man.

The victim, a college-age Clallam County resident who asked police not to identify him publicly, was treated and released at Olympic Medical Center for contusions and abrasions, including a welt on the left side of his face, police said.

ADVERTISEMENT
0 seconds of 0 secondsVolume 0%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
00:00
00:00
00:00
 

“Our primary focus in a case like this is to look out for the interests of the victim,” Smith said. “He did nothing wrong.”

The victim said he was walking from a bar to a friend’s house when about six males and females who appeared to be high-schoolers got out of three vehicles at West Ninth and Cedar streets between the Eighth Street bridges and confronted him, Officer Harold Balderson said in a written report of the incident.

“He was walking along Cedar Street minding his own business, and these people arrived where he was,” Sgt. Jason Viada said Thursday.

“One person from the group beat the victim.

“The behavior of the suspect makes it racially motivated.”

The 18- to 19-year-old white male in the group yelled racial slurs while hitting the victim in the face with his fist three to four times, Balderson said in his report.

The victim, who “feared for his life,” did not fight back for fear of serious injury, according to Balderson’s report.

[“The victim] told the other people in the group to control their friend, but they did not,” Balderson said.

After the assailant “stopped swinging at him,” a second man started approaching him “in an aggressive manner,” according to Balderson’s report.

The group fled after the victim said he was going to call the police, Balderson said.

The victim does not live in the neighborhood where he was attacked, Viada said.

Not involved

Viada said police have talked to the owner of one of the three vehicles, the license plate of which was photographed by the victim.

The driver was not involved in the assault, the victim told police.

The assailant, described in Balderson’s report as 5 feet, 9 inches to 5 feet, 10 inches tall and wearing a red backward hat, tank top and jeans, could face a charge of felony malicious harassment, Smith said.

At least one other person faces a possible charge of misdemeanor rendering criminal assistance, Smith said.

Viada refused to comment on if there are suspects or persons of interest in the assault.

Viada also would not say if people being questioned in the case are cooperating with police.

He also said he was not comfortable saying how close police are to making an arrest.

“We have people we have to interview,” Viada said.

Report

Here are excerpts from Balderson’s report, in which the victim’s name was redacted:

The victim said the 18- to 19-year-old male approached him after getting out of one of the vehicles and started to call him racial slurs.

“As [the victim] was walking away from the male, the male started to hit [the victim] in the face 3-4 times with his fist,” Balderson said.

“[The victim] told females of the group to tell the male to go and leave him alone,” Balderson said.

The male kept approaching him, swinging at his face, calling him racial slurs, “and said that [the victim] was going to die,” Balderson said.

“[The victim] said he feared for his life and thought he was going to get jumped because he was black.

“[The victim] said that the suspect male said that he was surprised that [the victim] hadn’t dropped yet from the punches.”

“[The victim] said he was surprised too.

“[The victim] did not fight back or defend himself because he thought that the group would jump him.”

________

Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 55650, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Fred Lundahl, a pilot from Whidbey Island, prepares to fuel up his 1968 Cessna Aerobat, named Scarlett, at the Jefferson County International Airport in Port Townsend. Lundahl was picking up his plane Wednesday from Tailspin Tommy’s Aircraft Repair facility located at the airport. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Fueling up

Fred Lundahl, a pilot from Whidbey Island, prepares to fuel up his… Continue reading

After hours pet clinic set for Peninsula

Opening June 6 at Sequim location

Five to be honored with community service awards

Ceremony set Thursday at Port Angeles Senior Community Center

PASD planning for expanding needs

Special education, homelessness, new facilities under discussion

Clallam County Sheriff’s Office Animal Control Deputy Ed Bauck
Clallam Sheriff appoints animal control deputy

Position was vacant since end of 2024

Highway 104 road work to start week

Maintenance crews will repair road surfaces on state Highway… Continue reading

Supreme Court says no to recall reconsider

Sequim man found liable for legal fees

Chimacum Ridge seeks board members

Members to write policy, balance values, chair says

Fire destroys shop east of Port Angeles

A fire on Hickory Street east of Port Angeles… Continue reading

Jefferson Transit Authority to expand Kingston Express route

Jefferson Transit Authority has announced expanded service on its… Continue reading

From left to right, Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding students Krystol Pasecznyk and Scott McNair sand a Prothero Sloop with Sean Koomen, the school’s boat building program director. Koomen said the sanding would take one person a few days. He said the plan is to have 12 people sand it together, which will take a few hours. (Elijah Sussman/Peninsula Daily News)
Wooden boatbuilding school building ‘Twin Boats’

Students using traditional and cold-moulding construction techniques