'Knockout game' attack leads to hate crime
charge
.
A
white Houston-area man was arrested for allegedly shooting video of himself
sucker-punching a 79-year-old black man in a "knockout game"-style
attack.
HOUSTON — A white
Houston-area man was arrested Thursday on federal hate crimes charges for
allegedly shooting video of himself sucker-punching a 79-year-old black man in
a "knockout game"-style attack.
Conrad
Alvin Barrett, 27, made a brief appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Frances
Stacy, who scheduled a detention hearing for the Katy man on Friday.
According
to prosecutors, the attack happened Nov. 24 in Katy, but it wasn't until 12
days later that authorities connected the attack to the cellphone video of it.
Authorities
learned of the case because Barrett allegedly showed the video on the night of the
attack to an off-duty arson investigator he had just met at a restaurant in
nearby Folshear. According to the criminal complaint, Barrett asked the
off-duty investigator and the woman with the investigator if they knew about
the knockout game. He told them he played earlier that day, then showed them
the video, prosecutors allege.
The
investigator then flagged down a uniformed officer across the street and led
him to Barrett.
The
attack video doesn't show Barrett's face, but investigators matched his voice
to the voice in the video and the couple at the restaurant told investigators
that Barrett was wearing the same shorts and shoes at the person who shot the
video.
According
to prosecutors, the video shows Barrett approach the victim and ask,
"How's it going, man?" A "loud smack" is then heard, the
victim falls to the ground, Barrett laughs and says, "Knockout." The
assailant then flees in his vehicle.
The
victim lost three teeth and needed surgery to repair his jaw, which had been
broken in two places. He was hospitalized for more than four days, authorities
said.
Investigators
retrieved other videos from Barrett's phone, including some in which he uses
racial epithets and talks about trying to work up the courage to play the
knockout game, the complaint states. In one, Barrett says: "That plan is
to see if I were to hit a black person, would this be nationally
televised?"
U.S.
Attorney Kenneth Magidson said Thursday that such crimes won't be tolerated.
"Evidence
of hate crimes will be vigorously investigated and prosecuted with the
assistance of all our partners to the fullest extent of the law," Magidson
said.
Barrett's
attorney, George Parnham, said Barrett has bipolar disorder and has been
prescribed heavy medications to treat it. He said Barrett's family "feels
horribly sympathetic" for the person who was attacked.
"When
you start peeling back the layers of the onion and look at the mindset behind
the action you soon realize there's a mental issue," said Parnham, who
added that he's trying to gather as much information about Barrett's mental
health as possible.
If
convicted of the hate crime charge, Barrett could be sentenced to up to 10
years in prison and fined up to $250,000.
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