Three students of Palestinian descent shot in Vermont, CNN says suspect
held
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[November 27, 2023]
By Gabriella Borter and Steve Gorman
(Reuters) -A suspect was arrested in the shooting of three college
students of Palestinian descent in Burlington, Vermont, CNN reported
early on Monday, in an attack police are investigating as a suspected
hate-motivated crime.
A man with a pistol shot and wounded the three victims on the street
near the University of Vermont on Saturday evening and then ran away,
Burlington police said earlier.
CNN reported that a suspect, identified as Jason J. Eaton, 48, was
arrested on Sunday afternoon. Burlington police and the Mayor's office
did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment about an
arrest.
Two of the victims are U.S. citizens and the third is a legal U.S.
resident, all 20 years old, police said. Two of the men were wearing a
keffiyeh, the traditional black-and-white checkered scarf of Middle
Eastern dress, at the time of the attack, police said.
The victims were reported to have been speaking Arabic when attacked,
according to the Institute for Middle East Understanding, a nonprofit
pro-Palestinian advocacy organization, which also said the assailant
opened fire on the three men after he began to shout at and harass them.
Police say he fired four shots without saying a word.
The shooting came amid a rise in anti-Islamic and antisemitic incidents
reported around the United States since a wave of Israel-Palestinian
bloodshed erupted in the Middle East on Oct. 7.
"In this charged moment, no one can look at this incident and not
suspect that it may have been a hate-motivated crime," Burlington Police
Chief Jon Murad said in a statement earlier.
"That there is an indication that this shooting could have been
motivated by hate is chilling, and this possibility is being
prioritized" by police, Mayor Miro Weinberger said.
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First responders wheel a victim to an ambulance after a gunman shot
and wounded three college students of Palestinian descent in
Burlington, Vermont, U.S. November 25, 2023 in a still image from
video. Courtesy Wayne Savage via REUTERS.
The victims' families issued a joint statement earlier in the day
urging authorities to investigate the shooting as a hate crime, as
did the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, a U.S.-based
advocacy group.
"The surge in anti-Arab and anti-Palestinian sentiment we are
experiencing is unprecedented, and this is another example of that
hate turning violent," ADC National Executive Director Abed Ayoub
said.
The families identified the victims as Hisham Awartani, a student at
Brown University in Rhode Island; Kinnan Abdel Hamid, a student at
Haverford College in Pennsylvania; and Tahseen Ahmed, who attends
Trinity College in Connecticut. All three are graduates of the
Ramallah Friends School, a private Quaker secondary school in the
Israeli-occupied West Bank, the families said.
Two of the students were visiting the home of the third student's
family in Burlington for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Police said all three remained under medical care on Sunday, two
with gunshot wounds in their torsos and one shot in the lower
extremities. "Two are stable, while one has sustained much more
serious injuries," police said.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in New York and Steve Gorman in Los
Angeles; Additional reporting by Caitlin Webber and Utkarsh Shetti;
Editing by Josie Kao, Lisa Shumaker and Neil Fullick)
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