Motive in Georgia spa shootings uncertain, but Asian Americans fearful
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[March 18, 2021]
By Rich McKay
ATLANTA (Reuters) - Georgia authorities
charged a man with the fatal shootings of eight people, including six
Asian women, at Atlanta-area spas, and the violence heightened fears
among Asian Americans already rattled by a rise in hate crimes directed
at them since the COVID-19 pandemic began.
The 21-year-old suspect, Robert Aaron Long, told investigators that a
sex addiction drove him to commit Tuesday's killings and indicated he
frequented spas in the area, law enforcement officials said.
However, authorities did not discount the possibility that the attacks
were inspired at least in part by an anti-immigrant or anti-Asian
sentiment, or some personal grievance.
"The suspect did take responsibility for the shooting," Captain Jay
Baker of the Cherokee County Sheriff's Department told a news
conference.
"These locations, he sees them as an outlet for him, something that he
shouldn't be doing," Baker said. "It's a temptation for him that he
wanted to eliminate."
Long was charged on Wednesday with eight counts of murder and one count
of aggravated assault, according to officials in Atlanta and in Cherokee
County, about 40 miles (64 km) north of the state capital. Long was
being held in Cherokee County, where he resided and where the shootings
began.
Long was headed for Florida when he was apprehended, perhaps to carry
out further shootings, authorities said. A 9mm firearm was found in his
car.
Although officials said Long indicated he may have patronized the
establishments where Tuesday's violence occurred, they could not
immediately confirm whether he had actually been a customer of those
businesses.
And it was not clear whether the suspect may have visited spas for sex.
"This is still an ongoing investigation, and at this time we cannot
answer any questions pertaining to the businesses, nor services that any
of these locations were offering during or before this incident took
place," Officer C.J. Johnson of the Atlanta Police Department said in a
statement.
U.S. President Joe Biden said he was briefed by the U.S. attorney
general and FBI director on the shootings.
"The question of motivation is still to be determined," Biden told
reporters at the White House. "But whatever the motivation here I know
that Asian Americans are very concerned."
A report by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism this month
showed that hate crimes against Asian Americans in 16 major U.S. cities
rose by 149% from 2019 to 2020, a period when overall hate crimes
dropped 7%.
Civil rights advocates have said the rise seemed related to Asians and
Asian Americans being blamed for the pandemic, which originated in
China. Former President Donald Trump called the novel coronavirus the
"China virus," the "China plague" and even the "kung flu."
"It's very difficult to ignore that the Asian community has once again
been targeted, and it's happening across the country," Atlanta Mayor
Keisha Lance Bottoms told CNN.
INVESTIGATION UNDERWAY
Nonetheless, authorities said nothing that Long told them in interviews
indicated he was motivated by racial animosity, though they stressed the
investigation was in its early stages.
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Robert Aaron Long, 21, of Woodstock in Cherokee County poses in a
jail booking photograph after he was taken into custody by the Crisp
County Sheriff's Office in Cordele, Georgia, U.S. March 16, 2021.
The bloodshed began Tuesday evening when four people were killed and
another was wounded at Young's Asian Massage in Cherokee County,
Baker said. Two Asian women were among the dead there, along with a
white woman and a white man, Baker said. The surviving victim was a
Hispanic man.
In Atlanta, police officers responding to a robbery report an hour
later arrived at the Gold Spa beauty salon to find three women shot
dead, Police Chief Rodney Bryant told reporters.
The officers were then called to a separate spa across the street
where another woman was found fatally shot, Bryant said. All four
women killed in Atlanta were Asian.
South Korea on Wednesday said its consulate-general in Atlanta
confirmed that the dead included four women of Korean descent but
was verifying their nationalities.
Long was spotted driving later in southern Georgia, far from the
crime scenes, and was arrested without incident after a highway
pursuit, authorities said.
His first court appearance was set for Thursday, then postponed
without explanation.
Long's quick apprehension was aided by his family's cooperation with
investigators and by video footage from security cameras at the
crime scenes, police said.
Little about Long's personal life emerged the day after the
shootings; he graduated from an Atlanta-area high school in 2017 and
attended a nearby Baptist church.
An inactive Instagram account that appeared to have been his bore
the tagline: "Pizza, guns, drums, music, family, and God. This
pretty much sums up my life," according to The Daily Beast.
The killings marked the latest in a string of deadly mass shootings
at schools, movie theaters, medical clinics and other public places
in the United States in recent years.
Long purchased the gun found in his car legally at Big Woods Goods
in Holly Springs, Georgia, CNN reported, citing an attorney for the
company.
Gun control is a divisive issue in the United States, which
enshrines the right to bear arms in the Constitution. The U.S. House
of Representatives last week approved a pair of gun control bills as
Democrats looked to a shifting political landscape they hoped would
improve chances for enacting new laws after years of failed
attempts.
"We are witnessing the results of what happens when racist and
misogynistic ideologies collide in a society where there is also
easy access to guns," Amnesty International USA said in a statement.
(Reporting by Rich MacKay in Atlanta, Susan Heavey in Washington and
Barbara Goldberg in Maplewood, New Jersey; Additional reporting by
Dan Whitcomb and Steve Gorman in Los Angeles, Daniel Trotta in
Vista, Calif., Jan Wolfe, Andrea Shalal, Steve Holland, Sarah N.
Lynch in Washington, Hyonhee Shin in Seoul; Writing by Maria Caspani
and Sonya Hepinstall; Editing by Howard Goller, Will Dunham and
Cynthia Osterman)
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