Hate crime: Two sentenced to 3 years in jail for assaulting Sikh-American
The Sikh-American Maan Singh Khalsa had his turban knocked off and his hair cut with a knife.
A US court has sentenced two persons to three years in prison after charging them with hate crime for brutally assaulting a Sikh-American man last year in California.
BREAKING: Defendants Found Guilty of Hate Crime in Brutal CA Attack Against Sikh. Press Release: https://t.co/pzUgHlyM4y pic.twitter.com/zF1GnU2wu6
— Sikh Coalition (@sikh_coalition) May 18, 2017
Chase Little and Colton Leblanc were found guilty of felony assault and hate crime charges. They were sentenced to a three-year term in the California state prison for attacking Maan Singh Khalsa.
Khalsa, a Sikh American father and IT specialist, was brutally assaulted in Richmond Bay area, California in September last year. The Sikh-American was stopped at an intersection and the attackers got out of their truck and assaulted by hitting his face repeatedly, knocking off his turban and cutting his religiously-mandated unshorn hair with a knife.
"The recognition of the attack as a hate crime ? as harm to my dignity and my entire community ? is the first step in the process," said Khalsa, who had recognised his attackers during his statement in court yesterday.
"I still consider you my brothers, and I hope that you will learn about me and my community, and one day consider me your brother, too," he said according to a statement issued yesterday by the rights group named The Sikh Coalition.
Prior
to
the
charges,
the
coalition,
community
leaders,
and
a
group
of
civil
rights
organisations
advocated
vigorously
on
behalf
of
Khalsa,
urging
for
a
hate
crime
investigation
and
prosecution.
"The
attack
upon
Khalsa
based
upon
his
perceived
religion
and
identity
is
an
attack
upon
us
all,"
Contra
Costa
County
Deputy
District
Attorney
Simon
O?Connell
said.
"As a community we must do better and it is my hope that todays sentence moves us further in that direction,? he said.
The Sikh Coalition said in the last 15 years after the 9/11 attack, Sikhs remain hundreds of times more likely to be targeted in cases of profiling, bigotry and backlash than the average American.
In March this year, a Sikh man was shot in Kent city of Washington state after the attacker told him to "go back to your own country", it said.
In May, Sikh-American Prabhjot Singh who has experienced hate violence firsthand testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee about the urgent need to address hate crimes in the United States.
"Acknowledging that this bias-based attack is a hate crime under state law both recognises the deep dignitary harm to Khalsa, and ensures that we, as a society, confront the problems of Islamophobia, racism and xenophobia that make the Sikh community a target for violence," the coalitions staff attorney Pawanpreet Kaur said.
PTI