Panicking lawmakers request federal help against spreading 'knockout' game
Violent “knockout” attacks – where people randomly approach strangers on the street and punch them in the head – are spreading across the United States, and New York State lawmakers are asking the federal government for help.
New York State Assemblyman Dov Hikind has written a letter to
both President Obama and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder,
pushing for action against those participating in “knockout
games.” Typically, these attacks involve an individual, sometimes
flanked by others who record the incident, who stalks or walks by
a pedestrian and attempts to knock them unconscious with a fast,
powerful blow to the head. In at least two cases, people
have been killed.
Outside of New York, similar incidents have been reported around
the country, including Washington DC, Pennsylvania, and
California. Investigations are currently under way concerning a
possible link between the cases.
In New York, Assemblyman Jim Tedisco has introduced a new bill
that would label future “knockout games” as gang assaults.
According to WCBS New York, those convicted of the crime under
the measure would face up to 25 years in prison, and would be
tried as adults regardless of their age. The proposal also
includes prison time for anyone convicted of recording the
assault as it happens.
Meanwhile, New York City Council Member Peter Vallone Jr. is
pushing the Police Department to act quickly, as there have been
at least seven alleged “knockout” attacks in Brooklyn since
October.
“I’ve already written to [Police Chief] Ray Kelly,”
Vallone Jr. said to WCBS. “I want to know what we’re going to
do about it. These kids need to be prosecuted to the fullest
extent of the law, and we need to ensure that this doesn’t keep
happening.”
The NYPD has increased the number of officers on patrol in
neighborhoods where the attacks have occurred.
Victims of the assaults have ranged dramatically in age, from a
12-year-old boy to a 78-year-old woman, who was knocked to the
ground by a punch to the head in broad daylight in Midwood,
Brooklyn, last week.
In Jersey City, a 46-year-old man died after being punched in the
head from behind, according to the Associated Press. He fell and
struck his head on an iron fence. His three attackers, captured
the assault on video and later arrested, were 13 and 14 years
old.
In California, ABC 10 News reported that a man was struck as he
was crossing the street.
"It's hard to excuse this behavior, there's no purpose to
this," Jeffrey Butts, a psychologist specializing in juvenile
delinquency at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, said to
the AP.
"The behavior of the sudden assault of someone who seems
helpless has appealed to the idiotic impulsive quality of
adolescence forever," he added. "But there are now
bragging rights beyond your immediate circle, when this is on
television and online."