Current:Home > InvestBlack man details alleged beating at the hands of a white supremacist group in Boston -DataFinance
Black man details alleged beating at the hands of a white supremacist group in Boston
View
Date:2025-04-15 05:33:55
BOSTON (AP) — A Black teacher and musician told a federal court Thursday that members of a white nationalist hate group punched, kicked and beat him with metal shields during a march through downtown Boston two years ago.
Charles Murrell III, of Boston, was in federal court Thursday to testify in his lawsuit asking for an undisclosed amount of money from the group’s leader, Thomas Rousseau.
“I thought I was going to die,” Murrell said, according to The Boston Globe.
The newspaper said that U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani last year found the group and Rousseau, of Grapevine, Texas, liable for the attack after Rousseau didn’t respond to a civil lawsuit Murrell filed. Talwani will issue a ruling after the hearing from Murrell and several other witnesses.
Murrell was in the area of the Boston Public Library to play his saxophone on July 2, 2022, when he was surrounded by members of the Patriot Front and assaulted in a “coordinated, brutal, and racially motivated attack,” according to his lawsuit.
A witness, who The Boston Globe said testified at the hearing, recalled how the group “were ganging up” on Murrell and “pushing him violently with their shields.”
Murrell was taken by ambulance to the hospital for treatment of lacerations, some of which required stitches, the suit says. No one has been charged in the incident.
Attorney Jason Lee Van Dyke, who has represented the group in the past, said last year that Murrell was not telling the truth and that he was the aggressor.
Murrell, who has a background teaching special education, told The Associated Press last year that the lawsuit is about holding Patriot Front accountable, helping his own healing process and preventing anything similar from happening to children of color, like those he teaches.
The march in Boston by about 100 members of the Texas-based Patriot Front was one of its so-called flash demonstrations it holds around the country. In addition to shields, the group carried a banner that said “Reclaim America” as they marched along the Freedom Trail and past some of the city’s most famous landmarks.
They were largely dressed alike in khaki pants, dark shirts, hats, sunglasses and face coverings.
Murrell said he had never heard of the group before the confrontation but believes he was targeted because of the tone of their voices and the slurs they used when he encountered them.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Hit-and-run which injured Stanford Arab-Muslim student investigated as possible hate crime
- Is lettuce good for you? You can guess the answer. But do you know the healthiest type?
- California officer involved in controversial police shooting resigns over racist texts, chief says
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Italy grants citizenship to terminally ill British baby after Vatican hospital offers care.
- Myanmar resistance claims first capture of a district capital from the military government
- Israeli troops surround Gaza City and cut off northern part of the besieged Hamas-ruled territory
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- C.J. Stroud's monster day capped by leading Texans to game-winning TD against Buccaneers
Ranking
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- War took a Gaza doctor's car. Now he uses a bike to get to patients, sometimes carrying it over rubble.
- Animal shelters think creatively to help families keep their pets amid crisis
- Trump takes aim at DeSantis at Florida GOP summit
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Shooting in Tacoma, Washington leaves 2 dead, 3 wounded, alleged shooter turns himself in: Police
- 'It's freedom': Cher on singing, her mother and her first holiday album, 'Christmas'
- AP survey finds 55 of 69 schools in major college football now sell alcohol at stadiums on game day
Recommendation
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
'We're going to see them again': Cowboys not panicking after coming up short against Eagles
'We're going to see them again': Cowboys not panicking after coming up short against Eagles
Teen arrested in Southern California restaurant shooting that injured 4 last month
The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
Investigators headed to U.S. research base on Antarctica after claims of sexual violence, harassment
Live updates | Israeli warplanes hit refugee camps in Gaza while UN agencies call siege an ‘outrage’
Eagles' Jason Kelce screams like a madman in viral clip from win over Cowboys