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Atlanta shooting and the legacy of misogyny and racism against Asian women

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Megan Varner/Getty ImagesBY: MARLENE LENTHANG, ABC NEWS

(ATLANTA) — While authorities are still investigating the motive behind Tuesday’s shooting spree at three Atlanta-area spas that left eight people dead, including six Asian women, some advocates say the violence is inextricably linked to a history of racism and misogyny against Asian women.

Suspect Robert Aaron Long, 21, told investigators that he blames the businesses he targeted for providing an outlet for his addiction to sex, the Cherokee County Sheriff’s office said, yet officials believe there were multiple motivators for the attack.

However, advocates who spoke with ABC News say attacks against Asian Americans, in particular, Asian American women, is rooted in an ugly side of American history.

“This is racially motivated sexual violence against women,” Sung Yeon Choimorrow, executive director of the National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum, told ABC News.

“The reason they died wasn’t just because they were women, even though that’s what the killer says it is. They were murdered because they were Asian American women,” Choimorrow said. “You cannot separate that.”

The Asian women who lost their lives in the shooting were Daoyou Feng, 44; Xiaojie Tan, 49; Delaina Hyun Jung Grant, 51; Suncha Kim, 69; Soon Chung Park, 74; and Yong A. Yue, 63. Two other people, Paul Andre Michels, 54; and Ashley Yaun, 33; were also fatally shot.

Long has been charged with eight counts of murder in the attack, but has not been charged with a hate crime. Officials are still trying to piece together a motive.

Still, Choimorrow pointed to harmful stereotypes that objectify and depict Asian women as what she described as “hypersexualized,” “meek” and “submissive.”

“That really comes from America’s long history of how they have categorized Asian American women as commodity,” she said. “All the way back to 1875 with the Page Act, where they banned Chinese women from coming to the U.S. — really because they didn’t want the Chinese population to grow.”

Legalized discrimination

The Page Act of 1875, “ostensibly barred the importation of women” from Asian countries, “for purposes of prostitution,” according to language in a 2011 congressional bill expressing regret for passing discriminatory laws against Chinese immigrants in America.

The 2011 bill also referenced the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which banned Chinese laborers from entering the United States and was the first federal law that excluded a single group of people on the basis of race, according to congressional documentation.

Discriminatory exclusion laws against Chinese immigrants were repealed in 1943, according to the Department of State Office of the Historian’s website.

American imperialism and pop culture

Racism against Asian Americans continued despite the end of discriminatory legislation.

The United States’ imperial military presence in the Asia Pacific also played a role in stigmatizing Asians when American soldiers went abroad during World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War and the Philippine-American War.

And degrading depictions of Asian women are “pervasive” in pop culture, Dr. Melissa Borja, an assistant professor of Asian/Pacific Islander American studies at the University of Michigan, told ABC News.

“This depiction of Asian women as seductive, immoral, hypersexual … is in our popular culture in movies like ‘Full Metal Jacket’ and the musical ‘South Pacific’,” Borja said.

She said the Atlanta shooting is part of a “long-standing trend of violence” against Asian American women this year and amid a spate of anti-Asian hate crimes fueled, in part, by the racist rhetoric surrounding the coronavirus pandemic.

Former President Donald Trump, had repeatedly referred to COVID-19 as the “China virus,” among other offensive terms, during his presidency — speech that helped stoke anti-Asian sentiment, some critics have said. Despite his comments, last March Trump condemned xenophobic attacks against Asians and tweeted: “It is very important that we totally protect our Asian American community in the United States…The spreading of the Virus is NOT their fault in any way, shape, or form.”

The Stop AAPI Hate coalition received nearly 3,800 hate incidents from March 19 to Feb. 28 of this year.

Among those reports, 68% of the victims were women — meaning women were targeted 2.3 times more than men.

Borja conducted research with the University of Michigan’s Virulent Hate Project which analyzed more than 1,100 incidents of anti-Asian news media reports and found 61% of victims were Asian women.

“Asian American women were already dealing with the brunt of racist attacks in the past year, and they were already suffering,” Borja said. “Asian American women are feeling the rage in this moment, in the fear that they now have about their own safety, their own ability to go to work, walk down the street, go get groceries, go about their daily lives.”

Women of color in labor jobs, such as the victims who worked at the spa, are even more vulnerable because even amid the pandemic and rising hate incidents, they have to leave the safety of their homes to work.

Red Canary Song, a New York-based coalition of Asian advocates for massage parlor workers and sex workers, said Asians who work in these spaces are made “invisible” by gender and work.

“The women who were killed faced specific racialized gendered violence for being Asian women and massage workers … they were subjected to sexualized violence stemming from the hatred of sex workers, Asian women, working class people, and immigrants,” the group said in a statement.

Borja said the attack and today’s data are just “the tip of the iceberg in the range of incidents of hate.”

She said there’s a lack of resources to document hate incidents against Asians, mistrust surrounding reporting incidents to law enforcement, a lack of cultural understanding around hate crimes, and language barriers. Stop AAPI Hate says it led the effort to improve data collection by allowing anyone across the nation to report anti-Asian hate incidents, without sharing it with law enforcement.

Advocates are calling for conversations to unravel harmful stereotypes, for more ways to safely report hate crimes against Asians, for schools to educate youth on the nation’s Asian American history, and for legislation to address systemic issues at play.

For now the Asian American community is grieving the lives lost in the shooting with the hope for a better tomorrow.

“I want to tell all Asian women out there who are really struggling with thinking, ‘I know this is not about me, it’s about the eight victims,’ know that it’s okay to feel (for) both,” Choimorrow said “It’s okay to feel so scared because that feels so close to home.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Miami Beach declares state of emergency due to spring break crowds

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Joe Raedle/Getty ImagesBy MEREDITH DELISO, ABC News

(MIAMI BEACH, Fla.) — Miami Beach officials have declared a state of emergency due to “overwhelming” spring break crowds, imposing an 8 p.m. curfew this weekend for its entertainment district and temporarily closing several roads leading into the city.

Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber announced the new measures, saying the city feels at times “out of control.”

“At the end of the day, all the policing in the world isn’t going to stop something terrible from happening if it’s going to happen,” Gelber said during a press briefing Saturday. “Our city right now in this area has become a tinder, and we cannot have a policy of simply hoping that it’s not lit.”

The new emergency orders will be in effect for up to 72 hours, officials said.

The 8 p.m. curfew starts Saturday. A countywide curfew had already been in place from midnight to 6 a.m. due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Eastbound traffic on three causeways will also be closed to traffic, with some exceptions for residents and hotel guests, from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. Main thoroughfare Ocean Drive will also close to vehicular and pedestrian traffic starting at 8 p.m., save for residents, hotel guests and business employees.

There are additional emergency measures impacting nighttime restaurant operations, including sidewalk cafes.

The city is encouraging all businesses within what they’ve deemed a “high-impact zone” to close during this period and is urging hotel guests to stay off the streets after 8 p.m.

“This was not an easy decision to make,” interim City Manager Raul Aguila told reporters at the briefing. “We are doing that to protect the public health and safety.”

“Most of you saw, if not covered, the crowds last night in the entertainment district numbering into the thousands,” he added. “As we hit the peak of the peak of spring break, we are quite simply overwhelmed in the entertainment district.”

Friday night along Ocean Drive in particular was “quite simply overwhelming,” he said.

“It looked like a rock concert,” Aguila said. “You couldn’t see pavement and you couldn’t see grass.”

The mayor said this season’s spring break has attracted more visitors than in previous years, as access to other destinations may be limited due to COVID-19 restrictions.

“People tend to come to the place that is open,” Gelber said.

At least twice in the past week, Miami Beach police officers resorted to using pepper balls to disperse crowds near Ocean Drive. Two police officers were injured last weekend while taking a suspect into custody, the department said.

“We’ve done everything we can to try and mitigate the behavior that we are seeing, but quite frankly, I am concerned that the behavior is getting to be a little bit more for us to be able to handle,” Miami Beach Police Chief Rick Clements said during the briefing.

Clements said there was one incident Thursday night in which property was destroyed as hundreds of people dispersed. On Friday night there were three such incidents, resulting in injuries, he said.

Some businesses have opted to close during the spring break season. On Friday, the Clevelander in South Beach, a famous city hotspot, announced it will cease its food and beverage operations through at least Wednesday.

“Recently, we have grown increasingly concerned with the safety of our dedicated employees and valued customers and the ability of the City to maintain a safe environment in the surrounding area,” the management team said in an Instagram post.

ABC News’ Victoria Arancio and Joshua Hoyos contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Man arrested after he allegedly pepper sprayed and hurled racist insults at Asian gas station owner

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MattGush/iStockBy MARLENE LENTHANG, ABC News

(OAKLAND, Calif.) — A man has been arrested after he allegedly hurled racist insults and pepper sprayed an Asian gas station owner in Oakland, California.

On Thursday morning the suspect was caught on surveillance footage at a gas station appearing to spray a substance in the station’s owner’s face.

The gas station’s owner Cwell, who did not release his last name, told local San Francisco ABC station KGO that the incident started when the suspect got into a disagreement with the cashier because he wanted to pay for his gas in all coins.

When Cwell stepped in to diffuse the situation, the man launched his racist harangue, he said.

“He just started mouthing off … ‘You should go back to China,’ like that,” Cwell said. “We were just bursting out laughing because it was so unbelievable.”

Cwell said that when he followed the man outside to record his license plate, the man exited his car and started shouting racist comments including, “Go to China” and “you’re not from here, you’re Asian,” KGO reported.

Cwell also alleged the suspect attacked him with pepper spray.

“The guy had pulled out his pepper spray and he had shot my face, arms. I ended up going to the ER to get taken care of,” he told KGO.

Police announced Friday they arrested the suspect on assault charges and the case was presented to the Alameda County District Attorney for review.

“OPD denounces all incidents involving hate,” the police department shared in a statement. The investigation is ongoing.

“I totally appreciate that you let me share my story because this has got to stop. I hope this brings awareness that everybody goes through the same stuff. We just have to understand that and understand that we all have to work together,” Cwell said.

The attack comes amid a rise in anti-Asian hate crimes.

Nearly 3,800 incidents have been reported to Stop AAPI Hate, a California-based reporting center for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and its partner advocacy groups, since March 2020.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Unsettled weather West as severe storm threat develops South

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ABC NewsBY: DANIEL MANZO, ABC NEWS

(NEW YORK) — After a turbulent week, the weather pattern this weekend is looking much quieter across the country.

However, a new storm is beginning to move through the Western U.S. and it will bring mountain snow and some rain to the major western cities.

Any rain across most of the Western U.S., and especially in Southern California, is very much welcomed at the moment but the rain looks like it might just miss Los Angeles where they have received less than half the average of their wet season rainfall to date.

Some mountain snow could also make for treacherous travel, especially in the mountains passes in the Sierra.

By Monday, some of this activity will move into the Central U.S. and become the next organized system that will bring impactful weather to the eastern half of the nation.

After receiving their fourth largest snowstorm on record earlier this week, it appears another round of snow is headed for the Denver metro area by Monday.

Additionally, the developing storm will spark the next round of severe weather with strong storms developing later Monday across Oklahoma and Texas. The risk includes the threat of damaging winds.

By Tuesday and Wednesday, the threat for rain and strong storms will move further south and east.

There will likely be another severe weather threat across portions of the Gulf states in this time frame.

The result of this pattern is, locally, over a foot of snow in some of the northern Rockies and Cascades through Monday.

Several inches of snow will be possible in the urban corridor of Colorado as well on Monday and, locally, 2 to 3 inches of rain is possible through Monday in parts of the central Plains and Midwest.

The other big news is that it is officially spring this morning and spring-like temperatures will surge into the Midwest and Northeast over the next few days.

Temperatures will likely be 10 to 15 degrees above average in the coming days across this region.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Georgia spa killings likely 'targeted attack driven by personal grievance': Source briefed on probe

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ABC NewsBy JOSH MARGOLIN and EMILY SHAPIRO, ABC News

(ATLANTA) — Authorities investigating the eight homicides at Atlanta-area spas have determined that the killings were likely a “targeted attack driven by personal grievance,” according to a source briefed on the probe.

Detectives and analysts are still trying to piece together suspect Robert Long’s motive and say that the work is both complicated and critical in order to understand what happened, how it played out and why.

Long, 21, was taken into custody hours after the Tuesday shootings which took place at three different locations: one in Cherokee County and two in Atlanta.

Long frequented the two Atlanta spas, Atlanta police Deputy Chief Charles Hampton Jr. said at a news conference Thursday.

Six of the eight killed were Asian women, and the crimes came amid a rise in anti-Asian American and Pacific Islander hate crimes across the nation.

The Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday that “Long told investigators that he blames the massage parlors for providing an outlet for his addiction to sex,” and that “Long told investigators the crimes were not racially motivated.”

Investigators familiar with mass-casualty incidents believe it is likely the spa killings mark yet another case where the motivators “don’t fit into neat buckets.” In other words, investigators now believe there were multiple motivators that led both to the attack and the targets selected.

There is no concrete evidence supporting the idea that the locations and victims were targeted because of their ethnicity, but investigators are actively trying to determine what, if anything, the suspect might have said, written or thought about Asians or Asian women, in particular.

Detectives believe the locations were certainly the intended targets and are now trying to figure out if the women were specifically targeted, if the suspect had had any direct interactions with them and what, if anything, had transpired previously.

The church that Long belonged to, Crabapple First Baptist Church, said in a statement, “In the strongest possible terms, we condemn the actions of Aaron Long.”

“The Long family have been members of our church for many years,” the church said. “We watched Aaron grow up and accepted him into church membership when he made his own profession of faith in Jesus Christ.”

“We were absolutely devastated at this senseless loss of life,” the church said, adding, “We deeply regret the fear and pain Asian-Americans are experiencing as a result of Aaron’s inexcusable actions.”

Long is charged with eight counts of murder. Long waived his first court appearance, according to his attorney, J. Daran Burns, who was appointed to represent Long by the Cherokee County Office of Indigent Defense on Wednesday.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.