Live updates: Asian American communities on edge after deadly shootings | CNN

Asian American communities on edge after deadly shootings

Amara Walker Biden split
CNN's Amara Walker gets emotional after Biden speech
04:21 - Source: CNN
13 Posts

Biden: "Hate can have no safe harbor in America. It must stop."

President Biden provided Americans a sobering look at the racist behavior countless Asian Americans have had to contend with since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

Biden’s remarks were made in Atlanta this afternoon just days after the deadly shootings at three Atlanta-area spas where six of the eight people killed were Asian women.

Biden added: “Documented incidents of hate against Asian Americans have seen a skyrocketing spike over the last year, let alone the ones that happened and never get reported. It’s been a year of living in fear for their lives just to walk down the street. …. With all the good that laws can do, we have to change our hearts. Hate can have no safe harbor in America. It must stop. It’s on all of us, all of us together to make it stop.”

Watch here:

74b523e6-c96f-4bbd-9303-adcd3d82711d.mp4
02:30 - Source: cnn

Harris: "Racism is real in America and it has always been"

Vice President Kamala Harris made a speech this afternoon acknowledging the United States’ racist past in the aftermath of the shootings that claimed eight lives earlier this week around the Atlanta area.

Harris added: “For the last year we’ve had people in positions of incredible power scapegoating Asian Americans, people with the biggest pulpits spreading this kind of hate. Ultimately this is about who we are as a nation. This is about how we treat people with dignity and respect. Everyone has the right to go to work, to go to school, to walk down the street and be safe and also the right to be recognized as an American, not as the other, not as them, but as us.”

Vice President Harris' message to Asian Americans: "We won't be silent. We won't standby."

Vice President Kamala Harris vowed Friday to “always speak out against violence” following a meeting with Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) leaders in Georgia.

The vice president shared her message on Twitter after meeting with leaders following shootings at three Atlanta-area spas, which killed eight people — including six Asian women. 

“We want Asian Americans in Georgia and across our nation to know: We won’t be silent. We won’t standby. We will always speak out against violence,” she said.

Read her full tweet:

Friend of spa shooting victim remembers her as "someone that made you feel like family"

Greg Hynson remembers his friend, Atlanta-area spa shooting victim Xiaojie Tan, who he knew as Emily, as someone that made you feel like family.

He said he would often stop by her Cherokee County business, Young’s Asian Massage, to say “Hello,” just like he did this past weekend. It was the last time Hynson said he saw Tan, who was busy at the time.  

“I’ll come back later,” he remembered telling her when he saw her.  

This past October, during his birthday, he remembered getting a text from Tan, who wrote, “Hey, what are you doing?” 

She then invited him over to the business, where flowers and a cake, with his name, was waiting for him.  

That’s just emblematic of the type of person Tan was, Hynson said — loving and unselfish.  

The two met through mutual friends more than five years ago.  

Tan, he said, was a diligent, hardworking businesswoman.  

“Emily’s employees, they were always sweet and nice people,” he said. “Very similar to her personality.”

He also confirmed that Tan was the mother of a daughter who was a recent University of Georgia graduate.  

Biden and Harris are meeting with Asian American leaders in Atlanta

President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are meeting with Asian American leaders at Emory University in Atlanta in the wake of deadly shootings that killed eight people, including six women of Asian descent.

Here’s who will be attending today’s listening session:

  • Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms
  • Georgia State Sen. Dr. Michelle Au
  • Georgia State Sen. Sheikh Rahman
  • Georgia State Rep. Marvin Lim
  • Georgia State Rep. Bee Nguyen
  • Georgia State Rep. Sam Park
  • Stephanie Cho, executive director of the Asian Americans Advancing Justice-​Atlanta
  • Victoria Huynh, vice president of the Center for Pan Asian Community Services
  • Bianca Jyotishi, Georgia organizing manager of the National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum
  • Cedric Richmond, director of the Office of Public Engagement
  • Sameera Fazili, deputy director of the National Economic Council

Both Biden and Harris will be speaking following the meeting.

Biden urges Congress to pass Covid-19 Hate Crimes Act

President Biden just issued a statement urging Congress to “swiftly pass” the Covid-19 Hate Crimes Act

Biden also noted that during his first week in office, he signed a presidential memorandum to “condemn and combat racism, xenophobia, and intolerance against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the United States.”

Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will be meeting with Asian American leaders in Atlanta today following Tuesday’s shooting that killed eight people, six of whom were Asian women.

Go There: CNN answers your questions about the Atlanta spa shootings investigation 

As police continue to investigate the shootings at three spas in the Atlanta area that left eight people dead, the city’s mayor says she believes the incident was a hate crime.

The attack has shaken the Asian American community in the city and around the country. Six of the eight people killed were Asian women. President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will be in Atlanta today meeting with Asian American leaders.

CNN correspondent Natasha Chen was in Georgia answering viewers’ questions about the investigation.

Watch:

88fe70b7-ff47-43b3-8acb-217cd2b70372.mp4
11:06 - Source: cnn

Husband of spa shooting victim: "The most valuable thing" in my life was taken from me

Mario Gonzalez, the husband of Delaina Yaun, 33, one of the victims of the spa shootings, said he heard the gunshots from inside the spa, according to his interview with Mundo Hispanico.   

 “It was a very sad day,” said Gonzalez. The father of two went to Young’s Asian Massage with his wife, but was in a separate room when the shooting started, he said to Mundo Hispanico.  

“We were going with the intention of getting a massage but I wasn’t expecting my wife’s life was on its way,” said Gonzalez to the newspaper. 

“We were on our way, happy, she had just left work and in one moment this happens,” said Gonzalez. 

“About an hour in, almost at the end, I heard the shots. I didn’t see anything, only, I started to think it was in the room where my wife was,” Gonzalez told the Spanish-language newspaper. 

Yaun was one of four people killed at the spa near Woodstock, Georgia, CNN has reported. 

Robert Aaron Long, the suspect, is being held without bond in Cherokee County on several murder charges. Long is accused of killing a total of 8 people.

More than $550,000 raised for the sons of one of the spa shooting victims

GoFundMe page for the two sons of Atlanta spa shooting victim Hyun Jung Grant has raised $550,000 as of Friday morning.

The GoFundMe page, which the company tells CNN they verified, was purportedly set up by Grant’s son Randy Park. 

CNN has reached out to Park, who did not immediately respond.

According to the page, about 14,000 people have donated.

On the page, Park writes the murder of his mother “is something that should never happen to anyone.”  Grant, 51, died of a gunshot wound to the head Tuesday, according to the Fulton County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Park said his mother was “one of my best friends and the strongest influence on who we are today.“

“Losing her has put a new lens on my eyes on the amount of hate that exists in our world,” he wrote.

Park said he and his brother have been advised to move out of their house to save money and “due to some legal complications,” he and his brother have been unable to obtain her body so they can have a funeral. Park said he and his brother hope to stay in their home.

Fulton County Medical Examiner identifies 4 shooting victims

The Fulton County Medical Examiner today released the names of the four women killed in Atlanta during a string of shootings at massage parlors. 

They are:

  • Soon Chung Park, a 74-year-old Asian woman, who died of a gunshot wound to the head
  • Hyun Jung Grant, a 51-year-old Asian woman, who died of a gunshot wound to the head
  • Suncha Kim, a 69-year-old Asian woman, who died of a gunshot wound to the chest
  • Yong Ae Yue, 63-year-old Asian woman, who died of a gunshot wound to the head

Earlier this week, officials in Cherokee County identified the four people killed there: Delaina Yaun, 33, of Acworth; Paul Andre Michels, 54, of Atlanta; Xiaojie Tan, 49, of Kennesaw; and Daoyou Feng, 44. One man, Elcias Hernandez-Ortiz, survived. 

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this post misstated which agency released the victims’ identities. It was the Fulton County Medical Examiner. This post also failed to list the full names of three of the victims. It has been updated to include full and correct names for Yong Ae Yue, Hyun Jung Grant and Soon Chung Park.

Rep. Grace Meng: GOP congressman's comments during hearing on discrimination were "completely insensitive"

Democratic Rep. Grace Meng said Republican Rep. Chip Roy was “completely insensitive” during a House hearing on discrimination against Asian Americans.

Meng yesterday fired back at comments about China made by Roy, saying he was “putting a bull’s-eye on the back of Asian Americans across this country.”

During the hearing, in arguing that Americans “deserve justice” for victims, Roy also made a reference to lynching, saying, “there’s an old saying in Texas about find all the rope in Texas and get a tall oak tree. You know, we take justice very seriously and we ought to do that, round up the bad guys.”

“First of all, it was such a source of comfort to have that acknowledgement that this is a real pain and situation going on in our country. We wanted to have a very honest hearing and to work together to find solutions,” Meng said on CNN’s “New Day.”  

Meng said she’s been hearing from constituents who are scared to let their kids go outside due the rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans. She said former President Trump “empowered this sort of racist behavior” for the past year during the pandemic. 

“Just in the last two weeks, a mom and her baby were taking a walk in the park in the middle of the day. Someone came up to her, spat in her direction three times, calling her the Chinese virus and to go back. Two days ago, a 13-year-old boy was just playing basketball at a local park and a group of people threw basketballs at his head telling him he was a Chinese virus and he should go home,” she said. 

Watch:

Atlanta mayor says on spa shootings: "I think it's difficult to see it as anything other than a hate crime"

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms told CNN last night she thinks that Tuesday’s spa shootings were a hate crime. 

Bottoms added, “There are many areas of hate that are covered within the definition of a hate crime,” later adding, “I think it’s difficult to see it as anything other than a hate crime.” 

The mayor said she’s spent the past days reaching out to members of the Asian community in Atlanta “to make sure we have all of the information we need to make sure that our communities are protected,” adding the dialogue will continue. 

The 21-year-old suspect, Robert Aaron Long, is in custody in relation to the shootings in Cherokee County, Georgia and the two others in Atlanta. In total, eight people — including six Asian women — died in the three shootings.

Long claimed responsibility for the shooting in Cherokee County, where he faces four counts of murder and a charge of aggravated assault, according to the county sheriff’s office. He also has been charged with more four counts of murder, Atlanta Police Department said.

Watch:

ca9ea6ef-349b-413a-a35b-5c6177ae1baf.mp4
01:34 - Source: cnn

Biden and Harris will meet with Asian American leaders in Georgia today

President Biden and Vice President Harris are heading to Georgia today

The trip that had previously been planned to promote their Covid-19 relief package. But the White House’s plan to promote the package took a somber turn after a rampage here this week killed eight people — including six women of Asian descent.

White House officials ended up canceling a planned evening rally intended to help explain the benefits of the law.

The President and vice president are instead set to meet with Asian American leaders. Still, the White House has stopped short of calling the shootings a hate crime, despite calls to do so.

GO DEEPER

A trip to the spa that ended in death. These are some of the victims of the Atlanta-area shootings
Some officials call for hate crime charges in the Atlanta-area spa shootings that left 8 dead
Victims of the spa shootings highlight the vulnerability of working-class Asian women as more Asian Americans get attacked
Biden orders flags to be flown at half-staff in honor of Atlanta shooting victims
2 adjacent buildings. 2 horrific attacks. 24 years apart

GO DEEPER

A trip to the spa that ended in death. These are some of the victims of the Atlanta-area shootings
Some officials call for hate crime charges in the Atlanta-area spa shootings that left 8 dead
Victims of the spa shootings highlight the vulnerability of working-class Asian women as more Asian Americans get attacked
Biden orders flags to be flown at half-staff in honor of Atlanta shooting victims
2 adjacent buildings. 2 horrific attacks. 24 years apart