It
was close to 5 o’clock on the afternoon of Nov. 4, 2013, and Sasha
Fleischman was riding the 57 bus home from school. An 18-year-old senior
at a small private high school, Sasha wore a T-shirt, a black fleece
jacket, a gray newsboy cap and a gauzy white skirt. For much of the long
bus ride through Oakland, Calif., Sasha — who identifies as agender,
neither male nor female — had been reading a paperback copy of “Anna
Karenina,” but eventually the teenager drifted into sleep, skirt draped
over the edge of the bus seat.
As
Sasha slept, three teenage boys laughed and joked nearby. Then one
surreptitiously flicked a lighter. The skirt went up in a ball of flame.
Sasha leapt up, screaming, “I’m on fire!” Two other passengers threw
Sasha to the ground and extinguished the flames, but Sasha’s legs were
left charred and peeling. Taken by ambulance to a San Francisco burn
unit, Sasha would spend the next three and a half weeks undergoing
multiple operations to treat the second- and third-degree burns that ran
from thigh to calf.
Richard
Thomas, the 16-year-old boy who lit the skirt on fire, was arrested the
following day. Citing the severity of the crime, the Alameda County
district attorney, Nancy O’Malley, charged Thomas as an adult, stripping
him of the protections — including anonymity — customarily afforded to
juveniles. Charged with two felonies, each with a hate-crime clause that
increased the time he would serve if convicted, Thomas faced the
possibility of life imprisonment.
Oakland
is a city of more than 400,000 people, but it can often feel like a
small town. The attack happened in my neighborhood, on a bus my own
teenager sometimes takes home from school. Sasha Fleischman’s family and
my family have close friends in common. Richard Thomas once attended my
son’s high school. But even when events unfold practically on your
doorstep, it isn’t always easy to make sense of them.
Crime
was easy enough to understand — in 2013, Oakland had the nation’s
highest robbery rate. But this was something different. An act of savage
brutality had taken place in a public setting in the middle of the
afternoon.
Continue reading the main story
Oakland
is one of America’s most diverse cities. We pride ourselves on our
tolerance; this is, after all, the Bay Area. Yet for all its laid-back
inclusiveness, Oakland is also a city of grim contrasts. The wealthier
hills neighborhoods have good schools, low crime and views of the bay.
The historic buildings downtown are filling with tech start-ups,
boutiques peddling handmade jeans and nightspots with seven-ingredient
cocktails. But little of this good fortune has spilled over into East
Oakland, where Richard lived, a region of grinding poverty and chronic
violence. Richard and Sasha lived in the same city, but their paths
might never have crossed if they didn’t both ride the 57 bus.
Sasha Fleischman’s ride
to and from school took an hour and involved two transfers, but Sasha
used the time to nap or do homework. Maybeck High School, Sasha’s school
in Berkeley, caters to bright, quirky kids interested in taking, its
website says, “personal and intellectual risks.” That description
certainly applied to Sasha, a skinny, intensely analytical kid with
wavy, chin-length brown hair, thick eyebrows and a radiant smile, who
started inventing languages at the age of 7 or 8.
After
reading a web comic called “Poly in Pictures,” which explores
polyamory, gender, sexuality and orientation, Sasha, then a 16-year-old
boy named Luke, began an epistemological investigation of gender
identity, asking friends and family how they knew what their gender was.
“At
first I just assumed that I was this heterosexual man, because I didn’t
have any reason to assume otherwise,” Sasha said one afternoon last
year, sitting on the Fleischmans’ red sofa by a window festooned with a
chain of paper cranes. “But I started thinking, Well, am I a guy?” Most
people told Sasha that they just knew what gender they were, but Sasha
didn’t feel that way.
“And
so I started identifying as genderqueer,” Sasha said. “For me, at
least, genderqueer includes an aspect of questioning. And that was a big
part of it for me. The fact that I was questioning my gender meant that
I was genderqueer.”
Sasha’s
parents, Karl Fleischman and Debbie Crandall, work in education, and
their relationship with their only child has an affable ease. Karl, a
college-radio D.J. turned public-school kindergarten teacher, is the
shyer of the two, with a dry wit and a quick grin. Debbie, a bookkeeper
at a private school, is more emotional and effusive. But while they
embraced Sasha’s new name (chosen for its gender neutrality) and mostly
remembered to use the preferred plural pronoun, “they,” to refer to
their child, they still found Sasha’s rejection of gender a bit
perplexing. (Telling Sasha’s story also poses a linguistic challenge,
because English doesn’t offer a ready-made way to talk about people who
identify as neither male nor female. Sasha prefers “they,” “it” or the
invented gender-neutral pronoun “xe.” The New York Times does not use
these terms to refer to individuals.)
“I’m
trying to get my head around it,” Debbie admitted, two years into the
change. “I understand coming out as gay or even trans. But this is
harder for me to understand. I support them,” she said, referring to her
child, “but I just don’t understand what it means.”
Because
genderqueer or agender people don’t have a box to check on most
questionnaires, there isn’t much data about how many people identify
this way, or even what most of them mean by the term. The 2011 National
Transgender Discrimination Survey found that 13 percent of transgender
or gender-nonconforming respondents identified as “a gender not listed
here.” These respondents were more likely to be young and educated and
to live in the coastal blue states than other transgender people. They
were also more likely to have been harassed or assaulted.
Since
preschool, Sasha had attended small, alternative schools, where
challenging gender norms was unremarkable. In a Montessori middle-school
grade with only 25 students, two identified as transgender, including
Sasha’s best friend. Maybeck High School, with just more than 100
students, had two who were transgender and two, including Sasha, who
identified as agender. Outside school, Sasha dove into virtual and
real-world communities devoted to constructing alternate realities,
filled with people who created new languages (known as conlangers) or
who obsessed over the intricately plotted web comic “Homestuck” or who
participated in Live Action Role Playing, a theatrical descendant of
Dungeons and Dragons, in which costumed players acted out game scenarios
in places like Tilden Park on the outskirts of Berkeley. In this world,
quirkiness was not just accepted but encouraged.
Sasha
started wearing a skirt in January 2013, accepting three hand-me-downs
from a friend. Previously Sasha’s style tended toward steampunk — top
hats, tweeds, vests and bow ties, even a pocket watch. But Sasha loved
the sartorial gender-mashup that came from adding a skirt to the vest
and bow tie. For Sasha’s parents, the most surprising thing about the
new look was how public it was. Shy and introverted, their child had
always excelled at being invisible. Now the teenager was not just
visible but conspicuous — a boy in a skirt. Instead of bashfulness,
Sasha exhibited a newfound confidence.
“It
feels like making this discovery and coming to terms with it has really
helped Sasha become themselves,” Karl mused, fiddling with the
rainbow-colored friendship bracelet he wore. “Sasha seems more
comfortable in the world.”
Still,
Debbie and Karl worried that publicly flouting gender norms could be
dangerous — even in the liberal Bay Area. Karl was once beaten up while
jogging in Berkeley by some men in a pickup truck who thought he was
gay. Debbie was concerned that Sasha’s skirt-wearing might attract a
similar response. “I worry about how the world sees it and what the
world can do — what crazy people can do,” she said.
For
a long time these fears seemed to be groundless. Sasha wore a skirt
every day from January to November 2013 and experienced only one
negative reaction, when an older woman at a bus stop insisted, “You’re
not a girl!”
And
so when Sasha drifted into sleep on the 57 bus on Nov. 4, it was an
untroubled sleep. As the teenager would say later: “I can sleep through
anything on the bus.”
When Richard Thomas
boarded the bus that day, he was a junior at Oakland High School, his
third school in as many years. Located in the city’s middle-class
foothills, O High, as it’s known locally, is the oldest of Oakland’s
high schools (Gertrude Stein attended it). While it draws Asian, Latino
and African-American students from throughout the city, the school is
spurned by the white families who live nearby. Its test scores aren’t
terrible, but it has a reputation as a rough place.
Like
Sasha, Richard had a long commute home from school, although his began
close to where Sasha’s ended. From Oakland High, he traveled to the part
of town known as Deep East, where he lived with his mother, Jasmine
Jackson, his mother’s fiancé, his 4-year-old brother and one of the two
cousins his mother had raised ever since their mother, Jasmine’s sister
Savannah, was murdered in 2006. The house, a single-story white-stucco
bungalow, was clean and snug and sparsely furnished, decorated with
framed photos of family.
A
food-service worker at a residential care facility, Jasmine sent
Richard to Oakland High because she thought it offered a better academic
and social environment than the high school in her own neighborhood.
Like Debbie Crandall, she worried about what the world could do to her
child. She had Richard when she was only 15, splitting up with his
father, Richard Sr., shortly afterward. While she was proud of always
having a job, she didn’t earn much money. She wanted her son to attend
college and to have a career.
These
were big dreams in her part of town. An investigation by The San
Francisco Chronicle found that of some 600 black male students who start
at Oakland high schools as freshmen each year, only about 300 end up
graduating and fewer than 100 graduate with the requirements needed to
attend a California state college or university. The odds of landing in
the back of a police cruiser, on the other hand, are much better.
African-American boys make up less than 30 percent of Oakland’s
under-age population but account for nearly 75 percent of all juvenile
arrests. And each year, dozens of black men and boys are murdered within
the city limits.
From
a young age, Richard lost family and friends to violence. In addition
to his aunt Savannah, killed in a spray of bullets while sitting in a
car in San Francisco, his aunt Tish was murdered by her boyfriend in
2008. Three of his childhood friends were murdered as well, most
recently his best friend, Tyronta Mickens. People used to say Richard
and Tyronta were twins, because they were both handsome, light-skinned
boys with a goofy sense of humor and a penchant for practical jokes.
When Richard was 14, the two were sent to a group home in Redding, after
they were involved in a fight with some skateboarders. (Because Richard
was a juvenile, the details of the case are sealed.) Tyronta was
released before Richard, but shortly after that, on Jan. 7, 2013, he was
shot multiple times while sitting in a car in an East Oakland parking
lot.
When
Richard found out about his friend’s death, he called his mother from
the group home to ask if it was true. “He just started crying and
crying,” Jasmine recalled. Instead of hanging up, Richard just put the
phone down and walked away.
Richard
came back to Oakland that summer, heading into his junior year. He
signed up for a summer-job training program conducted by the Unity
Council, an Oakland nonprofit, which led to an internship. His
supervisors noted how much effort he put in, sometimes redoing the
sloppy work of others. But when school started, Richard struggled. He
fell behind academically and began cutting school. Early in September,
Oakland High’s attendance compliance officer, Kaprice Wilson, found
Richard outside school in the middle of the day, about to get on a bus
with a girl who had just been suspended. When Wilson told him that she
had to escort him back to class, Richard came along cheerfully,
peppering her with questions. Wilson explained that she ran an
intervention program for students who were chronically absent from
school.
“Can I be in your program?” Richard asked.
Wilson
was taken aback. Students didn’t usually volunteer for her program;
they were assigned to it. She wasn’t exactly trying to fill slots either
— she already had a caseload of some 800 chronically truant students,
and her program was meant for freshmen and sophomores, who are easier to
get back on track than juniors and seniors. But when she looked up
Richard’s file, she saw that his grades were poor and his attendance
spotty.
“I
want you to help me like you help them,” Wilson remembered him saying.
“Because I’ve been to a lot of schools, and I’ve been in trouble, but
I’m really not a bad kid.”
A
petite woman who favored dangly earrings and liked to kick off her
shoes while working, Wilson was a kind of surrogate mother to many of
Oakland High School’s troubled kids. Some of them even called her Mom,
bringing her their grades, photographs and artwork to hang on her walls
and writing her apologies when they ran into trouble. Her tiny office
was papered with these missives: “Maria is your best daughter ever,”
read one. “I’m sorry mom, she made me hecka mad,” read another —
written, Wilson told me, by a kid who had just been suspended.
Richard
adopted Wilson’s office as a kind of safe zone, a place to hang out
between classes. He would confide in her about his life. When other kids
were there, he would often draw them out, listening to their problems.
He liked to give and receive hugs and was known for his silly, childlike
sense of humor, his willingness to look foolish if it would get a
laugh. He gave Wilson his mother’s phone number, suggesting that they
might talk. He wanted his mother to know that he was doing everything he
could to get on the right path. “I’m going to graduate,” he told
Wilson. “And I’m going to make her happy.”
Yet
Richard was apprehensive. He was having trouble understanding his
schoolwork and wanted to be tested for learning disabilities. He was
worried about graduating. And the violence around him was pressing in.
That fall, another friend, this one from Oakland High, was shot. At the
end of October, while walking to the store in an unfamiliar neighborhood
with his cousin Gerald, Richard was robbed at gunpoint by two teenage
boys who took his money, his phone, his coat and his shoes. In the
moment, he told Wilson, he had only one thing on his mind: surviving.
But later, he kept thinking about one of the robbers, whom Richard knew
and had thought of as a friend. He felt betrayed.
Richard
skipped school for a few days after that. On the afternoon of Nov. 4,
Richard’s 18-year-old cousin, Lloyd Rhodes, showed up at Oakland High
School and tried to persuade him to leave early. The campus security
officer, Carlitta Collins, wouldn’t allow Lloyd on campus, because he
wasn’t a student, so he hung around outside the gates until Richard got
out of school. Before leaving for the bus stop, Richard gave Collins a
hug.
“I’m telling you,” she said, “I didn’t feel nothing but love when he hugged me.”
Every Alameda County
transit bus is equipped with cameras that continuously record sound and
video from multiple vantage points. I first watched the video of the
attack in the office of William Du Bois, Richard’s lawyer, on a laptop
in a conference room. Before me was a grid of 12 views that could be
watched simultaneously or one at a time. The video itself, grainy and
impersonal, conveys the ordinariness of the afternoon. Passengers look
at their phones or peer through the scratched windows at the darkening
streets outside.
On
the video, Richard and Lloyd board the bus at the front. Richard,
wearing an orange-brimmed New York Knicks hat, is quiet and smiling. The
heavyset Lloyd is loud and rambunctious — bouncing, shouting, trying to
get the attention of a girl at the front. After using his bus pass,
Lloyd catches sight of a tall boy in a white hoodie sitting near the
back and heads his way. According to the statement Richard made to the
police, it was this boy, whom Richard identified only as Jamal, who
pointed out Sasha sleeping across the aisle from them, whispering, “Look
at this dude.”
On
the video, you can’t hear what Jamal says as he passes the lighter to
Richard. Richard later told his lawyer and his mother that the whole
thing was meant to be a prank. He thought the fabric would smolder for a
moment, and Sasha would wake up and slap out the spark, startled but
uninjured.
The
skirt didn’t catch fire the first time Richard flicked the lighter, or
the second or the third. The video shows the boys laughing and joking
between tries, horsing around, cuffing each other. Then Richard flicks
the lighter a fourth time. This time, the skirt ignites. Lloyd calls to
the driver to open the back door. Richard jumps off the bus. Lloyd looks
back and then stops, transfixed, as Sasha’s skirt erupts into a sheet
of flame.
The
next few seconds are hard to watch. Sasha’s voice is high and
terrified. “I’m on fire! I’m on fire!” The flaming skirt looks
unearthly, impossible. At first, Jamal howls with laughter, then, as
Sasha careers toward him, he cringes and climbs onto his seat. “Everyone
was running, laughing, screaming, yelling at the bus driver: ‘Stop the
bus! Open the doors!' ” recalls Dan Gale, one of the two men who tackled
Sasha and put out the fire. “I was yelling: ‘Get down! Get on the
ground!’ I just dove.”
The bus stopped. Dazed and in shock, Sasha stood and pushed through the back doors onto the street.
On
the video, Gale says, “You need to call an ambulance, man,” as Sasha
paces outside, charred legs naked to the November chill, talking to Karl
on a cellphone. Then the driver walks to the back of the bus and kicks
the tattered remnant of Sasha’s skirt through the door.
“Real stupid!” he bellows, cursing at the boys.
Richard was alone
in Kaprice Wilson’s office the next day when the police came to arrest
him. He had been trying to speak with her all morning, even calling her
from class, but Wilson asked him to wait until he had a break. She was
on her way to meet him when she saw him being led away in handcuffs.
At
the police station, Officers Anwawn Jones and Jason Anderson placed
Richard in an interview room and left him there. A video shows Richard
sitting by himself. An officer returns at one point to hand him a bag
lunch. Richard unpacks a soda, a sandwich and a bag of chips. He smooths
the paper bag flat and places the sandwich on top. Then he folds his
hands and bows his head. He crosses himself three times. Then he begins
to eat his lunch. When the police officers return, he has his head down
on the table."You didn’t eat all your chips?” Officer Jones asks.
Richard says, “I was getting a little stomachache.”
The
officers are friendly. They ask questions about Richard’s life — where
he lives, what sports he plays, how he’s doing in school, whether he has
a girlfriend. In response, Richard is candid, almost confiding. He
tells them about the fight that sent him to the group home, about having
“a little breakdown” after Tyronta’s murder, about his troubles in
school. When they ask about the events of the previous afternoon,
Richard tells them that he was on the 57 bus when he saw a man with his
skirt on fire.
“What do you think about dudes who dress up in skirts?” Officer Jones asks.
“I’m not with that,” Richard says. “I wouldn’t say that I hate gay people, but I’m very homophobic.”
Jones nods. “O.K. Why would you call yourself homophobic?”
“I don’t have no problem with somebody if they like men. But like if you do too much? Nobody cares, really.”
“Do too much?”
“Taking it to the next level,” Richard explains. Jones asks for an example.
“Cross-dressing and like — some people, like they try to make everybody know that they are that.”
After
asking Richard to go through the events on the bus a couple of times,
the police reveal that they have video of the incident. They know he did
it. They just want him to tell them why.
“Being stupid,” Richard says, his voice low.
“What
would even remotely make you think about setting something on fire like
that — someone’s clothing?” Anderson asks. “Was it because the dude was
wearing a dress? Did you have a problem with him?”
“I don’t know.”
“People
do things for a reason,” the officer says. “We’ve all made decisions in
life that may not have been the best choice to make at a given time.
What we’re trying to figure out is why this happened.”
“I’m homophobic,” Richard says at last. “I don’t like gay people.”
“Did you get angry because he’s a gay dude in a skirt, not just being gay but ‘doing too much?' ” Jones asks.
“Actually,
I didn’t know that his skirt was going to do that, that it was going to
catch like that,” Richard says. “It was like a little flame. I thought
it was just going to go out.”
But
it was too late to backpedal. Two days after Richard’s arrest, the
Alameda County district attorney announced the charges: aggravated
mayhem and assault with intent to cause great bodily injury, both
felonies, each with a hate-crime clause that would add an additional one
to three years in state prison to his sentence. If convicted, Thomas
faced a maximum sentence of life in prison — a punishment he would never
have faced had he been charged as a juvenile. Jamal, the boy who handed
Richard the lighter, was never interviewed, arrested or charged.
On Nov. 8, four days after lighting Sasha’s skirt on fire, Richard wrote the teenager a letter.
“Dear
Victum,” it began. “I apoligize for my actions, for the pain that I
brought to you and your family. I was wrong for what I did. I was wrong.
I had no reason to do that to you I don’t know what was going through
my head at that time. Im not a monster, I have a big heart I never even
thought of hurting anyone like the way I hurt you. I just wanted you to
know that im deeply sorry for my actions. I think about what happened
every second, I pray that you heal correctly and that you recover and
live a happy life. Please forgive me thats all I want. I take
responsibility for all my actions, I’ll take all the consiquences,” he
wrote. “I’m not just saying this because im incarcerated I honestly mean
every word.” He signed it, “Love, Richard Thomas.”
A
few days later, he wrote a second letter, this one addressed to “Mr.
Fleischman.” It was nearly three pages long, written in neat cursive.
“I
had a nightmare last night and I woke up sweating and apoligizing,” he
wrote. “I really hope you get back to the way you were. I went to court
yesterday and there still making me seem like a monster, but im not. I’m
a good kid if you get to know me. I’m sure you would have been a nice
person to,” he continued. “I was hoping that I can meet you face to face
so I can apoligize to you.”
He
went on to detail the charges against him, explaining that he was
willing to accept the assault charges but that he rejected the
hate-crime enhancements. “I don’t have a problem with homosexual’s,” he
explained. “I have friends thats homosexuals and we never had problems
so I don’t look at you wrong because of your sexualitie. Honestly I
could care less if you like men you weren’t trying to talk to me in that
way.”
As
for himself, he said: “I am not a thug, gangster, hoodlum, nor monster.
Im a young African American male who’s made a terrible mistake.”
Perhaps, he suggested, he and Fleischman had things in common. “I’ve
also been hurt alot for no reason, not like I hurt you but Ive been hurt
physically and metally so I know how it feels, the pain and confusion
of why me I’ve felt it before plenty of times.”
William
Du Bois put the letters in his briefcase. Because they contained
admissions of guilt, he felt he couldn’t send them to Sasha until after
the case was resolved. It would be 14 months before Sasha read them.
When
Sasha arrived home from the hospital on Nov. 27, 23 days after the
attack, it was to a street crowded with reporters and photographers.
There had been a march along the route of the 57 bus, with supporters
tying rainbow-colored ribbons to street signs and telephone poles along
the way. Cards, letters and packages poured in, including some from
Canada. An online medical fund raised $31,000 in donations. Several high
schools had sponsored skirt-wearing days; so did a local bookstore. At
Oakland High, Richard’s school, the varsity basketball team wore blue
jerseys with Sasha’s name on them and the words “No H8.”
Sasha
gave an interview to a local news station, wearing a skirt over
bandaged legs. “I was really excited that an agender person was in the
news,” Sasha explained to me later. “But I wasn’t that excited about the
circumstances, obviously. Those were my feelings: This is really great —
but does it have to be me?”
Sasha
acknowledged feeling angry sometimes. While the long-term prognosis was
excellent, everything was more difficult at the moment — walking,
taking a shower, getting dressed. The pain made it hard to sleep.
Ten
days after Sasha got home from the hospital, the family invited Dan
Gale, one of the two men who put out the fire, to their house for brunch
(the other man was never identified). Toward the end of the meal, the
conversation turned to Richard Thomas. Debbie and Karl had told
reporters that they wanted to see Richard tried as a juvenile, not as an
adult, and they had consistently cautioned against leaping to
conclusions about Richard’s motivation. Gale, a gravel-voiced
construction worker with a walrus mustache, remarked that he thought
Sasha’s parents showed more forbearance than he would have. He turned to
Sasha.
“How do you feel on that? I mean, this kid hurt you.”
Sasha
considered this. “I know he hurt me,” Sasha said. “He did something
that’s really dangerous and stupid. But then again, he’s a 16-year-old
kid, and 16-year-old kids are kind of dumb. It’s really hard to know
what I want for him.”
Jasmine Jackson,
Richard’s deeply religious mother, tried to believe that everything
that happened was part of a larger plan. “God is good,” she repeated in
the courthouse elevator. “God is good. God is so good.” When Richard was
escorted into the courtroom for the many procedural hearings that
followed his arrest, Jasmine would catch his eye and make a heart shape
with her fingers, pressing it to her chest.
She
was sure that Richard had learned something from what he did. “We’re
all going to learn something from this,” she said frequently. But once,
after saying it, she shook her head. “I wish it hadn’t gone this far and
he could have learned a different way,” she said. “I wish that the
courts would give him a suitable punishment so that he can learn from
this, instead of just being institutionalized.” This was her biggest
fear. “I want him to have enough time to do something with his life,”
she said.
Everyone
I interviewed who knew Richard made a point of telling me that he was
not homophobic. Richard had a gay friend, they pointed out, and his
mother’s cousin is transgender. Du Bois wouldn’t allow me to interview
his client; given the potential sentence, he felt the risks were too
great. But he argued that it made no sense to describe a child’s
still-forming opinions as “hate.”
“Lynchings
— they’re hate crimes,” he said. But as for a boy wearing a skirt, he
went on, “the kid who thinks that this is anomalous and decides to play a
prank is not committing a hate crime.”
O’Malley,
the district attorney, didn’t see it that way. “If somebody commits a
heinous crime against somebody because they’re a member of a protected
class, that is very purposeful discrimination,” she explained as we sat
in her office, before a massive wooden desk that belonged to Earl Warren
when he was the Alameda County D.A. Hate crimes, she argued, were
discrimination, just as segregation was. “It’s important to show that
this is the kind of behavior that will never be tolerated.”
Until
the mid-1980s, the law made no distinction between crimes motivated by
bigotry and crimes motivated by money, passion or boredom. Murder was
murder; vandalism was vandalism. The term “hate crime” arose in response
to what was described at the time as an “epidemic” of neo-Nazi and
skinhead violence, although in retrospect it’s unclear whether any such
epidemic existed. Since then, the number of bias-motivated prosecutions
has steadily declined. In California, a state with close to 39 million
people, hate-crime prosecutions have fallen 48 percent since 2003, with
just 158 bias crimes filed for prosecution in 2012.
A
majority of those charged with bias crimes do not fit the stereotype of
the squinting, bristle-headed loner sporting a swastika tattoo.
Researchers estimate that fewer than 5 percent are members of an
organized hate group. Most are young males, either in their teens or
early 20s, acting in a group. In a study of Boston hate-crime
prosecutions in the early 1990s, two-thirds of the offenders were
categorized as “thrill-seeking” — that is, they were groups of young
people “looking for some fun” at the expense of someone they regarded as
lower on the totem pole. The authors of the study found that many of
these offenders weren’t even particularly biased toward their victims
but were following the lead of a more biased peer.
Many
hate crimes, according to Phyllis B. Gerstenfeld, a criminal-justice
professor at California State University, Stanislaus, “don’t have as
much to do with the victim as they do with the offender and their own
insecurity — which of course is a lot of what’s going on with
adolescents in general.”
Two
groups that might have been expected to support O’Malley’s decision to
charge Richard as an adult, the National Center for Lesbian Rights and
the Transgender Law Center, wrote to her in November 2013, asking her to
reconsider. “When juvenile impulsivity and poor judgment produce dire
consequences, it does not make sense to craft a response intended for
adults,” they said in a letter that was also sent on behalf of the
A.C.L.U. of Northern California. “Rather, these are the very
circumstances under which it is important to remember that children are
different from adults.” The letter concluded: “We firmly believe that
you can demonstrate your office’s commitment to protecting the victims
of hate crimes without imposing adult sanctions on juvenile offenders.”
Richard’s first evidentiary
hearing was in March. Sasha took the day off from school and came to
court with Karl and Debbie, dressed in a navy blue skirt, a gray vest, a
brown striped bow tie, a gray tweed cap, a trench coat and purple high
tops. Richard’s mother was there, too. She had asked me in February if I
could arrange a meeting with Sasha’s family, but when I broached the
subject with Debbie, she recoiled and said she wasn’t ready. Now, in the
vestibule outside the courtroom, Jasmine, a strikingly pretty woman
with almond-shaped eyes and a high round forehead, came forward.
“My
son’s not like that,” she said, the words tumbling out in a rush. “I
don’t know what made him do that, and I’m sorry. We’re not hateful
people.”
Then
she hugged each member of the family: Debbie, Karl, Sasha. One by one,
each of Richard’s relatives — aunts, uncles, cousins — came forward and
did the same. When it was over, both mothers were crying.
Afterward,
Jasmine kept talking about Sasha. “He just looked so innocent,” she
said to me. “He’s just so cute. He has such a nice family. He didn’t
deserve that. No kid does. It’s just not something I can get used to.”
There was so much more that she had wanted to say to them, but she
couldn’t find the words. “I don’t know what to say but sorry,” she told
me.
Seven months later,
on the morning of Oct. 16, Richard sat with his left leg shackled to a
wooden chair in the courtroom of Judge Paul Delucchi. He wore a gray
county-issue sweatshirt and khakis, and while he had lost the terrified
look of his early court appearances, his eyes were wary. There was a
faint peach-fuzz mustache on his upper lip.
Delucchi’s
courtroom was frequently crowded and chaotic, with prisoners stacked up
in the jury box listlessly waiting for their turn to appear. But each
time Richard came to court, I watched his eyes rove the room, taking
everything in. His lawyer had told me he was doing well in Alameda
County Juvenile Hall, getting good grades and staying out of trouble. He
was on track to graduate from high school in February. Jasmine visited
him every Sunday.
Jasmine
had stopped returning my calls, telling me in July that she was tired
of talking about the case, tired of thinking about it, just tired. “I
work 12, sometimes 14 hours a day, and when I come home, I just want to
go to sleep,” she said. On that morning, she sat just behind me, wearing
new long hair extensions with a greenish tint.
Debbie
Crandall sat next to me, her eyes fixed on Richard. He was going to
take a plea bargain. The mayhem charge and the hate-crime enhancements
would be dropped, and Richard would receive a five-year sentence on the
assault charge. With credit for time served and good behavior, the deal
would have Richard, now 17, released before his 21st birthday, making it
more likely that he could serve all his time in juvenile facilities. Du
Bois had urged Richard to accept it as “the best choice among the
available alternatives.” Debbie and Karl also wanted him to take the
deal, so that Sasha, now a freshman at M.I.T., wouldn’t have to fly back
for a trial.
Jasmine
wasn’t so sure. She had hoped for a better outcome, and communication
between her and Du Bois had grown increasingly poor over the summer and
fall. Now she and Richard had decided to accept the offer.
But
that morning, the deputy district attorney, Richard Moore, abruptly
changed the five-year sentence to seven years. No explanation was given
in court. Take it or go to trial, Du Bois said he was told. From my seat
in the gallery, I watched Du Bois pull a chair in front of Richard to
tell him the news. I could see the moment when Richard understood what
had happened. He turned his head to look at Jasmine. They stared at each
other for a long, heartbreaking moment, seeming to converse without
words. When Richard turned back to face Du Bois, he curled his head into
his shoulder. He would take the deal.
Du
Bois, a 40-year courthouse veteran, was usually calm and even-tempered.
But when I went to talk to him after the hearing, he was furious. Under
the terms of the deal, Richard’s sentence may still be reduced to five
years if he meets certain benchmarks between now and July — full
participation in available educational and rehabilitation programs, a
clean discipline record. But not all of that is in Richard’s control:
Another inmate could pick a fight with him; a staff member might write
him up for a minor offense. And because minors can be transferred to an
adult prison as soon as they turn 18, a longer sentence makes it more
likely that Richard will serve the bulk of his time in an adult prison
rather than in juvenile facilities. “He’s now thrown to the wolves,” Du
Bois told me. Weeks later, he was still fuming about Richard’s sentence.
“It’s punitive,” he said. “And for what? Protecting the community by
making this kid into a real gangster?”
O’Malley
told me over the phone in November that the new arrangement was meant
to help him, by giving him more time to receive treatment. She could
not, however, name the type of treatment programs she had in mind for
Richard or explain how sending him to adult prison would serve the
rehabilitation goals she had described.
Richard returned to
court a month later for sentencing. Debbie had been asked to give a
victim-impact statement. She read aloud a letter to Richard, her voice
quavering. “You attacked our child as they slept on a bus,” she began.
“Maybe you thought it was weird that Sasha was wearing a skirt.”
Richard’s gaze stayed on her face as she described Sasha’s ordeal — the
charred skin, the painful skin grafts, the hours of daily bandaging. His
eyes filled with tears.
“We
do not understand your actions,” Debbie went on. “But we also think
that hatred only leads to more hatred and anger. We don’t want you to
come out of prison full of hate.”
Debbie
and Karl walked out of the courthouse into the November sunshine and
stopped for coffee at a nearby sidewalk cafe. They were exhausted from
talking to reporters, unsure whether to be relieved or distraught. “I
wish it had turned out differently for Richard,” Debbie said. “We got
Sasha back. But poor Jasmine. She lost her son for years.” They hadn’t
expected to be so moved by seeing Richard’s face again.
“I just had this wave of emotion at how young he looked,” Karl said. “He just looks like a kid.”Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/01/magazine/the-fire-on-the-57-bus-in-oakland.html
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