logo
12-year-old accused of a hate crime after two Muslim students are attacked at their Connecticut middle school

12-year-old accused of a hate crime after two Muslim students are attacked at their Connecticut middle school

CNN23-03-2025

A 12-year-old student is facing a hate crime charge in juvenile court after allegedly being part of a group that attacked twin seventh grade Muslim students at their middle school in Waterbury, Connecticut, authorities said Friday.
The girl allegedly involved in the altercation was charged with intimidation based on bigotry and bias in the first and second degree through a court-issued summons to juvenile court.
'Investigators determined that the altercation was motivated by religion and/or ethnicity, meeting the legal definition of a hate crime,' according to a joint statement by the Waterbury State's Attorney's Office, Waterbury police and city officials.
The twin 13-year-old girls had their hijabs pulled off and were kicked and punched in the girls' locker room during their gym period, according to Farhan Memon, chair of the Connecticut chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations.
'They were beaten up by two of their classmates,' Memon said. 'One girl had bruises on her face and her sister had something held against her neck.'
One of the girls felt something slide across her neck, resulting in an abrasion on her neck, Memon told CNN. The girls' father took them to the hospital where doctors documented bruises and scrapes to the face, nose and neck, Memon added.
Another student involved 'was referred to a youth diversionary program as an alternative to arrest, based on her involvement in the incident,' the city said in its statement.
It's unclear if the two juveniles have appeared in juvenile court, or if they have legal representation.
Waterbury Public Schools Interim Superintendent Darren Schwartz in a statement said the incident is 'an opportunity to reaffirm our commitment to ensure our students are safe and respectful of one another.'
The incident, which unfolded during Ramadan, the Islamic holy month, comes as Muslims report a record-high number of anti-Arab and Islamophobic bias in the United States.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations in its annual civil rights report released last week said it received 8,658 complaints of Islamophobia last year – the highest number ever recorded by the organization.
The twins' family contacted CAIR one day after the locker room attack, leading to the nonprofit's involvement in the situation, Memon said.
While Waterbury Mayor Paul Pernerewski said the attack at the middle school was an 'isolated incident,' CAIR says it wasn't the first time the twins – who immigrated with their parents to the US from Egypt last year – had faced bullying from their peers over their religion and ethnicity.
'Although the sisters are not fluent in English, they confirmed that in the weeks leading up to the incident, students—including the girls who allegedly assaulted them—used terms such as 'Arab,' 'Muslim,' and 'Hijab' while laughing and making gestures at them,' CAIR wrote in a letter to officials on March 18.
Just days before the locker room attack, the twins had reported threats by the same student who has since been charged in the attack, according to CAIR.
The student allegedly 'dragg(ed) her finger across her neck in a death sign,' CAIR said in a letter to city officials. Waterbury Public Schools said the gesture was made on March 3 after the fight.
Asked about previous incidents among the students, the Waterbury Public Schools superintendent said there was an incident on February 28 that 'stemmed from a misconception that the twins were talking about the offender in class, which was deemed to be untrue.'
'The teacher immediately mediated between the students and offered further support, which was declined by all students,' superintendent Schwartz told CNN in an email statement.
Schwartz said the February 28 conflict 'would not meet that threshold' of bullying.
Police originally investigated the March 3 incident as a disturbance or assault, but the family later provided more information alleging their daughters were the victims of a hate crime, leading to a 'thorough' investigation of the claims, according to the police department.
'Every student deserves to feel secure and respected in their learning environment, and we will continue to work closely with our school partners to uphold that standard,' Waterbury Police Chief Fernando Spagnolo wrote in a statement.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Malaysian Agency Targets $1 Billion of Late Tycoon's Assets: NST
Malaysian Agency Targets $1 Billion of Late Tycoon's Assets: NST

Bloomberg

time18 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

Malaysian Agency Targets $1 Billion of Late Tycoon's Assets: NST

Malaysia's anti-graft agency is targeting assets worth at least 4.5 billion ringgit ($1 billion) in five other countries belonging to the late tycoon and former finance minister Daim Zainuddin, the New Straits Times reported. The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission plans to send a restraining order request to the respective countries using the Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act 2002, the newspaper cited the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission Chief Commissioner Azam Baki as saying.

Trump loses latest bid to get Central Park Five defamation lawsuit tossed
Trump loses latest bid to get Central Park Five defamation lawsuit tossed

CNBC

timea day ago

  • CNBC

Trump loses latest bid to get Central Park Five defamation lawsuit tossed

A federal judge on Friday dealt another blow to President Donald Trump's efforts to throw out a defamation lawsuit against him filed by plaintiffs formerly known as the Central Park Five. U.S. District Judge Wendy Beetlestone said that Pennsylvania's Anti-SLAPP law, designed to protect defendants from lawsuits targeting protected speech, does not apply in federal court, rejecting Trump's motion to dismiss the case. "The only issue before the Court is whether Plaintiffs' claims for defamation, false light, and intentional infliction of emotional distress ("IIED") can survive given Pennsylvania's Uniform Public Expression Protection Act, otherwise known as its Anti-Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation Statute," Beetlestone wrote in a 13-page filing. "Pennsylvania's Anti-SLAPP Statute (a state law) does not apply here, in federal court," she wrote in the filing, adding: "Accordingly, Defendant's Motion shall be denied." Five men who as teenagers were wrongfully convicted in the so-called Central Park Five jogger rape case sued Trump in October, accusing the then-Republican presidential nominee of defaming them. They cited a number of statements Trump made during his Sept. 10 presidential debate against former Vice President Kamala Harris, accusing him of falsely stating that the men killed somebody and pled guilty to the crime. "These statements are demonstrably false," they wrote in their filing against Trump. The five men — Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, Kevin Richardson, Antron McCray and Korey Wise — spent years in prison for the rape and assault of a white female jogger, a crime they were later exonerated of and did not commit. Trump has tried to dismiss the defamation lawsuit against him, but has not been successful. Judge Beetlestone in April also threw out Trump's motion to dismiss the case against him in a different filing.

Mary Trump slams ‘extraordinarily dangerous' attacks on Mamdani
Mary Trump slams ‘extraordinarily dangerous' attacks on Mamdani

The Hill

timea day ago

  • The Hill

Mary Trump slams ‘extraordinarily dangerous' attacks on Mamdani

Mary Trump, the president's niece, slammed right-wing attacks on Zohran Mamdani, the winner of New York City's Democratic mayoral primary, calling them 'extraordinarily dangerous' on SiriusXM host Dean Obeidallah's Friday show. 'It is not going to stop here. It's going to get worse,' Mary Trump said in response to a question about comments by President Trump and others attacking Mamdani, who would be the city's first Muslim mayor if elected. The president derided Mamdani, a democratic socialist, as a '100% Communist Lunatic' on Wednesday. 'This is not the first time that President Trump is going to comment on myself, and I encourage him — just like I encourage every New Yorker — to learn about my actual policies to make the city affordable,' Mamdani responded. Other influencers and lawmakers in the MAGA ecosystem have gone even further, often playing on Islamophobic tropes. Rep. Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.) called on Mamdani, who became a U.S. citizen in 2018, to be denaturalized and deported. The president's son Donald Trump Jr. and conservative influencers Charlie Kirk and Laura Loomer have connected his election victory to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Mary Trump, who lives in New York City, condemned attacks against Mamdani as 'anti-Muslim bigotry.' Mamdani has spoken openly about receiving violent threats throughout his campaign. The New York City Police Department investigated an alleged car bomb threat against him in early June, and his campaign hired security during the primary in response to an uptick in threats against him.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store