Three Boys Arrested For Stalking And Killing Homeless Man

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
45
48
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Playing The “Knock Out Game”

via zip:
Mr. Santiago was a “white hispanic”. The three boys appear to have been Obama’s sons.

Via Daily Mail:
Three New Jersey boys, two age 13 and one 14, have been arrested and charged with killing a homeless man after allegedly stalking and killing him in what police are calling a game of ‘knockout.’

The teens are accused of following Ralph Santiago, 46, and punching him in the back of the head in broad daylight in Hoboken, New Jersey, on September 10.

He fell against a fence and snapped his neck, killing him. His body was left on the quiet residential street before it was discovered by a passerby.

The boys were taken into custody and charged on Friday after prosecutors released surveillance images of the suspects in the hopes of identifying whoever killed Mr Santiago.

Keep reading…


http://www.nj.com/jjournal-news/index.ssf/2013/09/hoboken_neighbors_still_reelin.html#incart_m-rpt-1

 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
3
36
London, Ontario
A game of knockout? That's not a game, it's called assault. Or more specifically in this instance, it's homicide.

Man, what is wrong with people?
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
3
36
London, Ontario
Yes I would like the mentally ill to be armed. I'm sure the voices in his head wouldn't make that a problem in any conceivable way.8O
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
55,644
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Yes I would like the mentally ill to be armed. I'm sure the voices in his head wouldn't make that a problem in any conceivable way.8O
"You know my position on arming morons, Ollie. You arm one, you gotta arm 'em all. Otherwise it isn't good sport."
--Judge Flatt, Nobody's Fool
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Deadly 'knockout' game becoming popular
QMI Agency
First posted: Thursday, November 21, 2013 12:29 PM EST | Updated: Thursday, November 21, 2013 06:40 PM EST
A disturbing trend is emerging in some U.S. cities in which teens approach unsuspecting strangers and punch them. It's called the 'Knockout Game' and it's becoming increasingly popular.
Nine incidents have been reported in New York City this month, with a 78-year-old woman among the victims, NBC 4 New York reports.
Earlier this year, a 51-year-old man was killed in Syracuse, N.Y., after a group of teens wound up beating and stomping him to death.
And last week, a Washington D.C. woman was approached by a group of eight males on bikes and punched her in the back of the head, NBC's News4 reported.
Sun News hosts Alex Pierson and Gina Phillips weigh in on the scary new game.
Deadly 'knockout' game becoming popular | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

Sal

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 29, 2007
17,135
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It's always been the left's whole gambit, emotion not logic.
And the right's whole gambit is emotion without heart.

then there are balanced people between the extreme wingnuts

they slide back and forth on the continuum depending upon the situation
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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’Knockout game’ - Crime trend or random violence?
Daniel Kelley, Reuters
First posted: Tuesday, November 26, 2013 03:22 PM EST | Updated: Tuesday, November 26, 2013 03:33 PM EST
PHILADELPHIA - Police throughout the United States are investigating whether a rash of teen attacks on strangers, many of them elderly, is a crime trend known as the “knockout game” or a series of random acts of violence.
A savage assault outside a pizza parlor in Philadelphia left a man severely injured, but with all his belongings intact.
Reports of “knockout game” incidents - a shocking new national crime trend to some, and an urban myth to others - have emerged across the country, and officials have been left wondering how to address the problem.
The “knockout game,” as it has been reported, works like this: Teens punch a stranger, hoping to send the victim into unconsciousness with a single blow, generally while being filmed for posting on social media.
No statistics exist on the frequency of such attacks, and it is unclear how they differ from regular street crime that pervades urban life, but media outlets across the country have reported instances of the vicious assaults.
Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter, at a press conference on Monday, discussed the numerous random attacks by teens - but he steered clear of calling them a trend.
When a reporter asked a question using the term “knockout game,” Nutter said, “It’s an assault. An assault is an assault is an assault. I’m not going to get into word games.”
After the press conference, a reporter asked Nutter why he would not use the term “knockout game.”
“I’m not giving it any credibility,” Nutter said. “I want to make sure it doesn’t become a trend.”
New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly also declined to label a rash of attacks, mostly in Brooklyn, as “knockout game“ enactments out of concern for copycat attacks.
Many of the assaults are being investigated as possible hate crimes because they involve Jewish victims, including one at midday Monday when a 72-year-old woman was punched in the back of the head by a black man in his 20s who fled without taking her belongings, police said.
Nutter and Kelly both could have good reason to avoid lumping the crimes together as a sick trend. In the summer of 2012, Philadelphia officials began enforcing a juvenile curfew after the eruption of so-called flash mobs, in which large groups of teens gathered in public places and launched attacks on pedestrians.
“If you are thinking of engaging in this type of behavior,” Nutter said, “don’t do it. Stop.”
Critics of the reporting on the “knockout game” either deny that the trend exists or say it has been hyped by bloggers with an interest in pointing out attacks on whites by African Americans.
Reported instances of the assaults have varying characteristics. In some cases they follow the “one-punch“ example. In others, they appear to be gang attacks involving multiple assailants.
Many media reports on this possible trend do not say an attack is the result of the “knockout game,” but simply raise the question of whether an attack may be connected to it.
There are also reported instances of teens acknowledging that the game exists.
In 2011, when teens fatally attacked an elderly Vietnamese immigrant in St. Louis, Missouri, defendants acknowledged a game called Knockout King, where if a victim doesn’t fall to the first punch, other attackers try to finish the job, according to the Riverfront Times.
In Lansing, Michigan, WILX reported last summer on a game called “Point ‘em out, knock ‘em out” in which the assailant tried to use a taser on a victim.
Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey said on Monday that the teens involved in the pizza parlor attack never said they were playing the knockout game. In that incident, the assailants, aged 15 and 17, as well as the victim, age 29, were white.
Ramsey said the police department has no statistics on other instances. Random attacks are recorded by police either as simple assaults, or, if the beating is savage, aggravated assaults, he said.
’Knockout game’ - Crime trend or random violence? | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

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Houston man denied bail for alleged hate knockout game attack
Lisa Maria Garza, Reuters
First posted: Friday, December 27, 2013 12:41 PM EST | Updated: Friday, December 27, 2013 07:54 PM EST
A federal judge denied bond on Friday to a white Texas man charged with punching an elderly black man in a suspected race-based attack that the accused recorded as a video with his cell phone, court records show.
Conrad Alvin Barrett, 27, is suspected of striking the 79-year-old victim with a single blow that fractured his jaw in two places, according to the criminal complaint filed in federal court in Houston.
"Barrett is a danger to the community. He stalked his victim," U.S. Magistrate Judge Frances H. Stacy said in court records on Friday, calling the attack vicious.
Barrett was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2004 and has been treated with lithium and an anti-depressant, his lawyer George Parnham said, noting that his client also has a history of substance and alcohol abuse.
"He was not taking his prescribed medications on the day of the incident," Parnham said.
Prosecutors said Barrett made the video for a "knockout game" where attackers try to knock out a person with a single punch and then post a video of the assault on the Internet.
As the victim lay on the pavement, Barrett laughed, yelled "Knockout, baby!" and ran to his vehicle to flee the scene, the complaint said.
Later Barrett showed the video to an off-duty arson investigator he met by chance in a restaurant, who then notified authorities and had Barrett arrested, according to the court documents.
The video does not show Barrett's face, but prosecutors matched his voice to the voice heard in the video and the off-duty investigator told authorities that Barrett was wearing the same clothing as the person who filmed the video.
The Nov. 24 attack in Katy, Texas, 30 miles (50 kms) west of Houston, was carried out "because of the man's race and color," according to the complaint.
"It is unimaginable in this day and age that one could be drawn to violently attack another based on the color of their skin," said FBI Special Agent in Charge Stephen Morris, from the bureau's Houston office.
The victim underwent surgery to remove three teeth and have two metal plates inserted in his jaw. He was hospitalized for four days.
Investigators said Barrett recorded himself making racially charged statements on his phone, including one where he is alleged to have said: "The plan is to see if I were to hit a black person, would this be nationally televised?"
Barrett's parents expressed remorse in court today for their son's actions, but that they fear retaliation from the community after receiving anonymous threatening phone calls, Parnham said.
"They feel very sorry for what occurred, not only for their son, but also the elderly gentleman involved," he said.
Barrett was previously convicted for driving while intoxicated and stealing a vehicle. If convicted of the hate crime, Barrett faces a maximum of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Conrad Barrett. (Harris County Sherrif's Office/HO)

Houston man denied bail for alleged hate knockout game attack | World | News | Toronto Sun