Current:Home > ContactChainkeen Exchange-Rural Nevada sheriff probes potential hate crime after Black man says he was racially harassed -MoneyMatrix
Chainkeen Exchange-Rural Nevada sheriff probes potential hate crime after Black man says he was racially harassed
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-09 22:10:46
RENO,Chainkeen Exchange Nev. (AP) — A rural Nevada sheriff is investigating a potential hate crime after a Black man who was collecting signatures for a ballot measure recorded a confrontation with another man he said directed a racial slur at him and said “they have a hanging tree” for people like him.
“I’m still shaking every time I think about it,” Ricky Johnson told The Associated Press by phone Monday as he boarded a plane in northern Nevada back to his home in Houston, Texas.
Johnson posted part of the video of the Aug. 2 incident in Virginia City, Nevada, on social media, and the comments drew swift condemnation from local and state officials. Sponsors of the 10-day Hot August Nights class car event that was being held at the time said it revoked the registrations of those identified in the video confronting Johnson.
Storey County Undersheriff Eric Kern said Monday the office has completed interviews with Johnson and potential suspects and delivered the case to the district attorney for a decision on any charges.
“As far as a hate crime, it could be an element,” Kern told AP. “There is an enhancement we are looking at.”
Johnson, who can’t be seen on the video he posted to TikTok, said a white man called him a racial epithet and referenced the “hanging tree” before he started recording the encounter. In the recording, Johnson asks the man to repeat what he said.
A loud, profanity-filled argument on both sides followed before a woman told Johnson he was on her property and he repeatedly asks her not to touch him as they move the conversation into the street, the video shows.
Kern said Johnson provided the video to investigators. He said no one, whether suspect or victim, has been uncooperative in the investigation.
In a statement over the weekend, the sheriff’s office said it doesn’t condone racism, inequality or hate speech and wants to ensure the public it’s doing a thorough investigation.
“But I want to say that in general, in Virginia City, this is not something that happens here,” Kern said. “It’s really a sad thing but it’s an isolated incident. It’s has caused a lot of negative impacts on all sides because people are getting a negative opinion. People are calling businesses.”
Storey County District Attorney Anne Langer didn’t respond to an email request for comment Monday. A spokeswoman for her office referred calls to County Manager Austin Osborne. Osborne’s office said he wasn’t available.
Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford, who is Black, offered his support Monday to the Storey County Sheriff’s Office in the investigation of what he said was a “hateful, racist incident” in one of Nevada’s most storied towns.
Virginia City attracts tens of thousands of tourists who walk its wood-planked sidewalks filled with old saloons and stores in the Virginia Range just east of the Sierra, about 30 minutes outside of Reno.
It was Nevada’s largest city in the mid-1800s when the discovery of the Comstock Lode brought thousands of silver miners there. Samuel Clemens got his start in the newspaper business and adopted his pen name, Mark Twain, there at the Territorial Enterprise.
Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo posted on social media saying he was concerned and disappointed by the incident.
“Racism and hate have no place in Nevada — this behavior must be condemned in the strongest terms possible,” he wrote on X.
The Virginia City Tourism Commission denounced the “hateful and racist” behavior as “abhorrent and inexcusable.”
Johnson was working for Advanced Micro Targeting Inc., a Texas-based company that provides voter outreach and get-out-the-vote services, to collect signatures for a proposed Nevada state ballot initiative aimed at capping fees that attorneys collect from clients in personal injury cases.
Johnson said he’s been the target of racial slurs before but the Virginia City incident was different.
“To be actually in the middle of that and you have no way out. you feel like you’re being surrounded by all these people. I felt closed in,” he said.
___
Associated Press writer Ken Ritter contributed to this report from Las Vegas.
veryGood! (926)
Related
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- California family behind $600 million, nationwide catalytic converter theft ring pleads guilty
- Memo to Joe Manchin, Congress: Stop clutching your pearls as college athletes make money
- Ex-Michigan gubernatorial candidate sentenced to 2 months behind bars for Capitol riot role
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Rockets trade troubled guard Kevin Porter Jr. to Thunder, who plan to waive him
- Sophia Bush Is Dating Soccer Star Ashlyn Harris After Respective Divorce Filings
- A UNC student group gives away naloxone amid campus overdoses
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Russian President Putin insists Ukraine’s new US-supplied weapon won’t change the war’s outcome
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Greta Thunberg charged with public order offense in UK after arrest outside oil industry conference
- Pennsylvania prison officials warned of 'escape risk' before Danelo Cavalcante breakout
- GOP’s Jim Jordan will try again to become House speaker, but his detractors are considering options
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- What Google’s antitrust trial means for the way you search and more
- Ukraine uses U.S.-supplied long-range ATACMS missiles for first time in counteroffensive against Russia
- Lower house of Russian parliament votes to revoke ratification of global nuclear test ban
Recommendation
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
A security problem has taken down computer systems for almost all Kansas courts
'Nightmare': Family of Hamas hostage reacts to video of her pleading for help
Ex-Oregon prison nurse convicted of sexually assaulting women in custody gets 30 years
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Hong Kong court upholds rulings backing subsidized housing benefits for same-sex couples
Illinois boy killed in alleged hate crime remembered as kind, playful as suspect appears in court
Men charged with kidnapping and torturing man in case of mistaken identity