Today's Date: April 16, 2024
Celebration Obstetrics & Gynecology Now Accepting Partner's Direct Health Insurance   •   Three Years of Recognition for Brookdale Senior Living   •   lululemon Unveils Team Canada Summer Athlete Kit for Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games in Partnership with the Canadian Ol   •   Solis Mammography and Northwest Healthcare Announce Strategic Joint Venture to Enhance Women's Health in the Tucson Market   •   Seahawks Star Jaxon Smith-Njigba to Host 3rd Annual Seattle All-Star Classic Celebrity Softball Game on Saturday, July 6 at Taco   •   PowerSchool to Announce First Quarter 2024 Financial Results on May 7, 2024   •   Our Military Kids® Presents Courageous Kids Contest Winners   •   Sweeten Mother's Day with a Strawberry Passion™ Cake from Cold Stone Creamery®   •   Dudek Welcomes Kristine Thorpe as Vice President of Marketing   •   Bezos Earth Fund Announces $100 Million for AI Solutions to Tackle Climate Change and Nature Loss   •   MusiCares® to Hold The Day That Music Cares on April 26   •   Experts on Mass Violence Prevention and School Safety to Speak at UCCS 2024 McConkie Leadership Conference   •   QVC DEFINES A NEW AGE OF POSSIBILITY CHAMPIONING WOMEN 50 AND OVER TO LIVE THEIR BEST LIVES   •   Expansion of Premier Private School Elevates the Educational Landscape of Orange County   •   Avangrid Schedules First Quarter 2024 Earnings   •   Op-Ed: When Maternal Health Goes Wrong   •   Gradiant Launches CURE Chemicals for the World’s Essential Industries   •   LIGHTING THE WAY FORWARD AT "THE CRADLE OF HUMANKIND" IN DESTINATION: SCIENTOLOGY, JOHANNESBURG   •   Donaldson Company Releases Fiscal Year 2023 Sustainability Report   •   Bona Releases 2023 Sustainability Report
Bookmark and Share

Guilty Verdicts In PA Hate Crime Beating Case

 WASHINGTON - A federal jury in Scranton, Pa., has convicted Brandon Piekarsky and Derrick Donchak, both of Shenandoah, Pa., of a hate crime arising out of the fatal beating of Luis Ramirez. The jury found the defendants guilty of violating the criminal component of the federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it a crime to use a person’s race, national origin or ethnicity as a basis to interfere, with violence or threats of violence, with a person’s right to live where he chooses to live. In addition, the jury found that Donchak conspired to, and did in fact, obstruct justice.

During the trial, the jury heard evidence from multiple eyewitnesses that the defendants, aided and abetted each other and some of their friends in fatally beating Luis Ramirez because he was Latino and because they did not want Latinos living in Shenandoah.

According to the evidence presented at trial, on July 12, 2008, the defendants came upon Ramirez in a park after leaving a community festival. The defendants and several of their friends, some of whom testified during the trial, attacked Ramirez. During the course of the beating, the defendants and their friends yelled racial epithets in which they repeatedly called Ramirez a racial derogatory term and told him "This is Shenandoah. This is America. Go back to Mexico." According to testimony, Donchak beat Ramirez while holding a thick piece of metal identified at trial as a "fist pack." Piekarsky kicked Ramirez in the head as he lay prone on the ground. After Piekarsky kicked Ramirez, he told a bystander who was married to a Latino man to "tell your Mexican friends to get out of Shenandoah or you will be lying next to him." After the fight concluded, Ramirez was taken to Geisinger Regional Medical Center, where he died of massive head injuries. The jury also heard evidence that, immediately following the beating, Donchak conspired with some of his friends, some of their parents, and members of the Shenandoah Police Department to obstruct the investigation of the fatal assault.

"Hate crimes of this nature have no place in this country, and today’s verdict demonstrates that violence committed because of a victim’s race, national origin, or ethnicity will not be tolerated," said Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice. "As this case illustrates, the Civil Rights Division will vigorously enforce the right of every person who lives in this country to do so free of racially-based violence and intimidation."

Because the jury found that death resulted from their acts, Donchak and Piekarsky face sentences of up to life in prison on the hate crime charge. In addition, Donchak faces up to 20 years in prison on the obstruction charge and five years on the conspiracy charge. The defendants will be sentenced on Jan. 24, 2011, by Senior District Judge A. Richard Caputo.

This case was investigated by special agents from the FBI’s Philadelphia Division, and was prosecuted by Gerard V. Hogan and Myesha Braden of the Civil Rights Division’s Criminal Section.


STORY TAGS: HISPANIC , LATINO , MEXICAN , MINORITY , CIVIL RIGHTS , DISCRIMINATION , RACISM , DIVERSITY , LATINA , RACIAL EQUALITY , BIAS , EQUALITY



Back to top
| Back to home page
Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News