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The Washington Times Online Edition

N.Y. hate crimes on rise

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nicholas Hausch appears in court with six other Long Island teenagers accused in the stabbing death of Ecuadorean immigrant Marcelo Lucero.ASSOCIATED PRESS Nicholas Hausch appears in court with six other Long Island teenagers accused in the stabbing death of Ecuadorean immigrant Marcelo Lucero.

PATCHOGUE, N.Y.

The high-school buddies who trolled the streets looking for Hispanics to attack called it “beaner hopping.”

“Jose, Kevin and I started popping and Jose punched him so hard he knocked him out,” Anthony Hartford told police, according to prosecutors.

Mr. Hartford said he didn’t do it often: “Maybe only once a week.”

There had been other high-profile attacks on a growing Hispanic population on eastern Long Island before Ecuadorean immigrant Marcelo Lucero was stabbed to death a year ago Sunday on a street corner.

But it wasn’t until the seven teens accused in the killing told police of the attacks — and Hispanic residents who had been long silent about hate crimes came forward to confirm the stories — that officials began to realize what they were dealing with.

The year since the Lucero slaying has put a national spotlight on race relations and has seen the U.S. Justice Department launch a probe of hate crimes and police response to them. A national civil rights group released a study that found “a pervasive climate of fear in the Latino community” in Suffolk County.

On Saturday, dozens of people, including Lucero’s mother, brother and sister, held a candlelight vigil where he died, singing, holding hands and praying there wouldn’t be another such killing.

Many victims said they had always been reluctant to contact police, fearing they would be asked about their immigration status. Just weeks after presiding at a funeral for Lucero, a preacher invited Hispanic crime victims to share their experiences. Dozens came forward.

“It was a bunch of people relieved that someone was listening,” the Rev. Dwight Lee Wolter said. “They just wanted some sort of witness that their story was worth telling.”

Many were unable to identify attackers, but prosecutors gleaned enough evidence to file charges in eight other attacks against the teens accused in the Lucero killing.

Not all were crime victims. One man came to the church with his telephone answering machine wrapped in plastic, Father Wolter said. He had received threatening phone calls from his landlord, peppered with anti-Hispanic slurs, and wanted advice on making it stop.

Foster Maer, an attorney for Manhattan-based LatinoJustice, which called for the Justice Department investigation, said the Lucero killing “raised everybody’s awareness of how bad it is.”

Suffolk County Police Commissioner Richard Dormer said officers don’t ask victims whether they’re illegal immigrants and said the probe would exonerate the department.

Commissioner Dormer assigned a Hispanic officer to command a local precinct after the killing.

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