Memorial honoring Martin Luther King Jr. vandalized

Hendersonville, N.C. – A white North Carolina man accused of defacing a memorial honoring Martin Luther King Jr. has been charged with ethnic intimidation, according to authorities.

Heath Justus, 31, was arrested at a park in Hendersonville on April 28 after witnesses spotted him drawing on the image of the civil rights leader, news outlets reported Monday, citing Police Chief Blair Myhand.
Myhand told WLOS-TV that Justus used a permanent marker to scrawl “antisemitic depictions” on the memorial, in addition to other symbols and phrases.
The graffiti was “clearly designed to provoke a reaction, and not in a good way,” the Hendersonville Times-News quoted Myhand as saying.
The president of the Henderson County branch of the NAACP said she was “alarmed” by the act, adding that she was “just shocked that someone would take the time to deface this monument.”

Heath Justus
Heath Justus
The graffiti was removed by the city’s public works department, according to a Hendersonville official.
North Carolina law defines ethnic intimidation as threats or assaults on another person, or the damaging or defacing of property because of race, color, religion, nationality, or country of origin.
If convicted, the misdemeanor charge carries a maximum sentence of 120 days in jail.
It was unclear whether Justus had an attorney who could comment for him.
Source: wlos

Subscribe to website

Enter your email address to receive notifications of new items

you might also be interested in:

Report to us

If you have experienced or witnessed an incident of antisemitism, extremism, bias, bigotry or hate, please report it using our incident form below:

Subscribe to website

Enter your email address to receive notifications of new items