Four people have been arrested in the US city of Chicago over a video live-streamed on Facebook, in which a bound and gagged man was assaulted.
The man being assaulted has special needs, police say. His assailants can be heard making derogatory statements against white people and President-elect Donald Trump. In one part of the video they use a knife to remove part of his scalp.
Chicago police have described the video as a “sickening” possible hate crime. “It makes you wonder what would make individuals treat somebody like that,” Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson said in a press conference streamed on Twitter. “I’ve been a cop for 28 years, and I’ve seen things that you shouldn’t see in a lifetime, but it still amazes me how you still see things that you just shouldn’t.”
The incident happened on Tuesday, police say, in a flat on Chicago’s West Side. In the 30-minute video, the attackers can be seen cutting the 18-year-old victim’s clothes, dropping cigarette ash on him, pushing his head back with a foot and drawing blood by cutting off some of his hair with a knife. Several people can be seen drinking, laughing and smoking, while their bound and gagged captive cowered in the corner of the room.
In other videos posted online the young man is beaten, made to drink from a toilet bowl and forced at knife-point to say “I love black people”.
An African-American woman talks to the camera, sometimes with slurred speech. At least two male African-Americans are also visible in the footage.
How Did Police Find Them?
The unnamed white victim is a school acquaintance of one of the attackers. Police say they found him wandering in the streets in a disorientated and distressed state after the assault.
Later they say they responded to reports of an assault close to where he was discovered and uncovered evidence of violence and damage to property. They described him as facing “mental health challenges”. They believe he may have been kidnapped for up to 48 hours prior to the assault.
He was taken to hospital, traumatised by the attack, and had difficulty communicating with police, but was later released from hospital.
Police say four people, two male and two female, aged 18, have been arrested. Three were Chicago residents, they said.
Police Commander Kevin Duffin said the police would investigate whether a hate crime had taken place. “They’re young adults, and they make stupid decisions,” he said, and, in reference to the language used, investigators would seek to “determine whether or not this is sincere or just stupid ranting and raving”, he said. Police also said there was a possibility that the incident would be considered a kidnapping.
How Violent Is Chicago?
Gangland violence is far from uncommon in Chicago. It recorded 762 murders last year, more than in the larger cities of New York and Los Angeles combined.
In speeches and tweets, President-elect Donald Trump has made much of the crime and racial division in the city where President Barack Obama worked as an activist and a senator.
The incoming president now faces the much tougher challenge of turning damning words into useful actions.
The incident has provoked a strong reaction on Twitter, especially among alt-right – the fringe group that celebrated Mr Trump’s election win with Nazi salutes. They say the mainstream media has been slower to react, and the police slower to label it a hate crime, than if a black person had been assaulted by white people. The hashtag #BLMKidnapping entered Twitter’s trending list – a reference suggesting the Black Lives Matter campaign was in some way involved, although police have not mentioned the organisation in connection with the incident.
Others used the hashtag to dismiss the suggestion as completely unfounded.
What Does Facebook Say?
The video was streamed on Facebook Live for 30 minutes, but the company later removed it. A spokesman told Associated Press the social media giant does “not allow people to celebrate or glorify crimes on Facebook”.
The company detailed its policy in July 2016, after the live-streaming of the aftermath of an incident in which a police officer shot a black man dead in St Paul, Minnesota. The company says its rules for live video are the same as for other content. Footage will not be removed simply because it is violent or graphic, but if it is shared to mock the victim or celebrate the violence it will be taken down.
Live videos can be reported to a team which is on call 24 hours a day. Reviewers in the team can interrupt a live stream if it breaches Facebook’s community standards.
In June, Chicago man Antonio Perkins, 28, was shot dead while live-streaming a video of himself on Facebook.