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BOCA RATON – An elderly black woman told
police she was pushed to the ground, beaten, kicked in the face, and dragged along
a sidewalk last week by two young men who insulted her with racial slurs and
demanded to know what she was doing at “their” beach.
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“I was just going to the bathroom, when
they knocked me down and started kicking me in the face,” 65-year-old Ruby Hope
Williams of Deerfield Beach said. “They
were saying, ‘[expletive] [N-word] [expletive,] what are you doing at our beach?”
The men are described as 20 years old; one
is white, the other has curly hair, tanned skin, and may be Hispanic.
Boca Raton police initially began an
investigation, but soon dropped the case, they said, because Williams did not
want the case to be investigated.
But at the insistence of the woman’s son,
police reopened the case.
“The case is being actively investigated as
a hate crime, at this time,” Boca Raton Police spokeswoman Sandra Boonenberg in
an email sent to the South Florida Times
on Monday.
No suspects have been located.
Police say they will release a statement
later today.
The brazen attack happened at dusk on Thursday,
Jan. 28 at Red Reef Park, a public beach with a parking lot at 1400 North Ocean
Blvd (State Rd. A1A) in Boca Raton. The area is home to some of the nation’s
most expensive mansions, luxury condominiums and exclusive shops. Red Reef Park
is a favorite with beach waders, and a popular spot for anglers.
Here’s what happened, according to a police
report on the incident:
Williams arrived at the park with her
husband, Kenneth Moore, around 6:15 p.m. As her husband went toward the water
to fish, she walked across the parking lot toward the public restrooms.
She got to the women’s restroom, and tried
to pull the door handle, but it was locked. She noticed a bright light coming
from a computer or TV inside an attached office, south of the restrooms. As she
walked toward the office windows, someone pushed her in the back from behind,
causing her to fall forward onto her face on the pavement. Her lip was cut in
the fall.
As she tried to get up, she heard someone
yell, “[N-word], what are you doing here?’’ While she was on the ground, she
turned around to see two young men. They dragged her along the pavement a
couple of feet south. The dragging caused bruises around her mouth. Then they
kicked her in the buttocks, and ran away.
The men did not attempt to rob or rape her.
She yelled for her husband, but he was too far away. She used her cell phone to
call her daughter for help, and her daughter told her to call 911. Williams was
able to get up from the ground, and walked to her husband, who was by the
waterway.
Police canvassed the area, but did not
locate the suspects. There were no witnesses and no surveillance cameras in the
area. A crime-scene technician photographed the scene and Williams’ injuries.
Later, paramedics arrived and rushed
Williams to Boca Raton Community Hospital.
Police put out an alert with the
description of the suspects, and searched the area.
“I canvassed the area but the suspects were
not located. There were no witnesses to the incident and no surveillance
cameras in the area,” the police report from Officer K.L. Brown states. “I
observed blood on the pavement south of the restrooms where the incident
occurred.”
After police arrived at the hospital to
speak with Williams further, the case was closed.
“Williams later advised that due to
insufficient leads to find the suspects, she did not want the case
investigated,” Brown wrote. “I request that this case be inactivated.”
Family members were outraged that the case was
not being investigated, and questioned police efforts to find the attackers.
“She was upset and being treated. Why would
any officer even ask her if she wanted it investigated?” asked one of Williams’
daughters, Rethema Williams, 42, of Deerfield Beach, who rush to meet her mother
at the emergency room. “She was traumatized, and bleeding and couldn’t even
speak.”
One of Williams’ sons, Arthur Williams, 48,
demanded that the case be reopened and investigated as a hate crime.
“This is a case for the [United States]
Justice Department to investigate as hate crime,” Arthur Williams said. “We
don’t want Boca Raton to try and cover this up just because it happened in a
rich neighborhood.”
He continued: “This is a hate crime. Since
it happened on the beach, in that rich area, they want to look the other way.”
Officials with the Boca Raton Police
Department say the case was initially closed only due to Williams’ desire not
to proceed. They say they reopened the case the next day.
“The victim initially reported that she did
not want the case investigated. Although the case is currently listed in the
system as “Inactive,” we immediately assigned it to Det. [Scott] Hanley on
01/29/10 and he placed two telephone calls to Ms. Williams’ residence that day,’’
Boonenberg, the police spokesperson, said.
“When he did not get a return call,
at 16:30 he responded to her residence in Deerfield Beach, where he met with
Ms. Williams, her husband and her daughter," Boonenberg said. "He took sworn taped statements from
each of them. He contacted the watch commander and requested and [sic] extra
patrol at the park. He also asked that officers go out during the same
timeframe and interview park visitors to see if anyone may have witnessed
anything.”
Arthur Williams responded: “Okay, that’s
good, but we need to know why they didn’t start the investigation immediately and
contact the news [media] so they could catch them. They were on foot. They have
no security, or cameras, and I can’t believe no one heard my mother screaming.
It doesn’t make sense, and the police report makes me believe they wanted to
keep this racist attack quiet.”
Anyone with information about the attack is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 800-458-8477. Callers may be eligible for a reward of up to $1,000 for information that leads to an arrest.
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Pictured above is Ruby Williams.
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