Four teens punched, kicked and hit a 63-year-old Asian woman with a broom in a parking garage in San Francisco’s SoMa neighborhood on Wednesday afternoon, police said.
The assault occurred around 2:52 p.m. in a garage on Mission Street between Fourth and Fifth streets, the San Francisco Police Department said. The assailants were two boys and two girls between the ages of 16 and 18. Officers rendered aid to the victim, who was then transported by paramedics to a local hospital with life-threatening injuries.
The San Francisco Fire Department confirmed that an ambulance responded to the scene but gave a conflicting report about the level of injuries suffered by the victim, saying they were minor.
The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency confirmed the assault happened at the Fifth and Mission/Yerba Buena Parking Garage, which it operates.
Authorities said the teens fled on foot and assaulted the victim with a broom.
Police searched the area for suspects but did not locate any, said the SFPD, which had made no arrests. The department did not provide a motive or any additional details about the possible reason for the attack.
Hate crimes against members of the Asian American and Pacific Islander community have been a pressing issue locally and spiked during the pandemic. Such attacks in San Francisco jumped by 500% in 2021, when 60 reports of hate crimes were reported against AAPI people, according to Police Chief Bill Scott, who noted the sharp increase from the nine such incidents that were reported in 2020.
Reports of assaults and other violent crimes against Asians have decreased since, according to Community Youth Center Program Director Michael Wong, whose organization does wellness checks and provides wraparound services for hate crime victims.
Still, some segments of the population remain vulnerable.
“Asian seniors are easy…
Read the full article here