A Detroit man stabbed two people at a suburban bus stop
after asking his victims whether or not they were Muslim, according to police.
Federal authorities are now looking at the case as a potential hate crime,
police said on Tuesday.
Both of the victims were standing at the bus stop outside of
Detroit with the suspect on Saturday, Southfield Police Chief Eric Hawkins
said. Several people there “engaged in conversation” until the suspect,
identified by Hawkins as 39-year-old Terrence Lavaron Thomas, “asked some of
the folks there if they were Muslims.”
Two of them answered, the chief told The Post on Tuesday:
They were not Muslims.
“[Thomas] was not not happy with that answer,” Hawkins said.
Shortly after, “without provocation,” Thomas pulled out a 3-inch folding knife
“and attacked one of them,” Hawkins said.
Both victims are in their early 50′s. One was stabbed five
times in the attack. The other was stabbed in the hand as he tried to stop the
attack, Hawkins said. Both were released from the hospital with “non-life
threatening injuries.”
Thomas then fled the scene, Hawkins said. Police arrested
him “within minutes.” He was carrying two knives — one of which appeared to be
the one used in the attack — and some marijuana, according to Hawkins.
Although authorities have not made a statement on the
suspect’s motive, Hawkins added that “we do know that he was not happy that
[the victims] indicated that they were not Muslims.” Thomas “said that he was a
Muslim,” Hawkins said.
Thomas was charged with two counts of assault with intent to
murder, one count of carrying a dangerous weapon, and one count of possession
of a controlled substance — all state charges.
Thomas could face a state charge of ethnic intimidation as
well, Hawkins said, but county prosecutors were still determining whether it
would be added or not.
According to the Detroit Free Press, Magistrate Eman
Jajonie-Daman set Thomas’s bond at $1 million and scheduled a preliminary
examination for March 4.
Michigan’s hate crimes law defines “ethnic intimidation,” a
felony, as when a person acts “maliciously, and with specific intent to
intimidate or harass another person because of that person’s race, color,
religion, gender, or national origin.”
Hawkins added that the FBI has been contacted about the
case, and are “looking at it as a
potential hate crime” to determine whether federal charges are warranted.
Credit to Abby Ohlheiser
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