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Author Topic: I'm a father and would do the same too if Tyrone was my kid, Asian man was just  (Read 1063 times)

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Offline theking

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...minding his own business as he went out for a walk:


Union City's police chief learned of a disturbing assault on a Sikh man. Then he found out the alleged attacker was his son



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HqO2tfFrYU

Union City Police Chief Darryl McAllister was mingling with residents Tuesday at National Night Out when members of the Sikh community brought a disturbing crime to his attention.

About 6 a.m. a day earlier, two men had attempted to rob a 71-year-old Sikh man as he walked by a park in Manteca, about 10 miles south of Stockton. When the man refused to cooperate, one of the suspects knocked the man to the ground — twice. The suspects left the man in the street as they began to walk away. Moments later, the main attacker ran back and kicked the man several times as he lay on the pavement. The confrontation was caught on nearby security cameras and spread on social media and the news. In the video, the suspect appears to spit on the man before running off.

“The greater Sikh community is devastated,” McAllister said in a statement. “They asked me to weigh in on how we could prevent this type of horrific crime in Union City.”
Later that night, McAllister got a call from the Manteca Police Deparment: The man in the security video was his 18-year-old son.

“Words can barely describe how embarrassed, dejected, and hurt my wife, daughters, and I feel right now,” McAllister wrote in a lengthy Facebook post Wednesday afternoon. “Violence and hatred is not what we have taught our children; intolerance for others is not even in our vocabulary, let alone our values…. My stomach has been churning from the moment I learned this news.”
 
Manteca police arrested Tyrone McAllister, along with the second suspect in the video, a 16-year-old male, Wednesday morning.

Investigators identified the younger McAllister by connecting several pieces. The night before the attack, police stopped a car for a traffic violation. The officer’s body camera footage shows McAllister in the car, as a passenger, wearing the same clothes seen in the attack, said Manteca Police Sgt. Stephen Schluer.

Also, McAllister had recently gotten out of jail, and investigators found Twitter and Snapchat posts indicating that he needed money and planned to rob people, Schluer said. He posted a photo in the same clothing seen in video of the attack.

The elder McAllister said his son had been estranged from his family for several months after he began to “lose his way” a couple of years ago with a bad crowd. The police chief said his son spent several months in juvenile hall, and later three more months in jail, for theft-related incidents.

“Since being released he has been wayward and has not returned to our family home for several months,” the chief, who helped Manteca police track the 18-year-old down in Modesto, wrote in his Facebook post.
“My family is shaken to the core,” McAllister continued. “His sisters (one corporate and the other about to start law school), are at a loss to understand any of this. It's difficult for us to comprehend how one of three kids who grew up with the same parents, under the same roof, with the same rules and same values and character could wander so far astray. We simply don’t know why, or how we got here. In the eyes of the public, no matter the irrelevance to the incident, the fact remains that the father of the perpetrator of this despicable crime is a police chief, period.”

The younger McAllister, who investigators say was the primary aggressor, and the 16-year-old were arrested on suspicion of attempted robbery, elder abuse and assault with a deadly weapon. Police are investigating whether the attack amounts to a hate crime.



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Offline Mr_Mechanic

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We have a 17 year old son ourselves.  and I would be very, very, x infinity disappointed if my son did something like that. 



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Offline DuMa

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Me and Manteca goes way back.  That is the city that was starting to develop when I took my behind the wheel test for my driver license.  Small city at the time with no one way so easy pass.  I also was employed in that city. 

We call it mantweakca for a reason.  In the middle of the night, kids be riding bicycles in the streets.  They are delivering drugs the bike way to stay under the radar as they can go through Ally ways with a bike and not a car. 

This case is stupid.  Robbing your own family member.  That is so effed up but the taste of drug is more strong as you can see. 




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Offline theking

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We have a 17 year old son ourselves.  and I would be very, very, x infinity disappointed if my son did something like that.

Yep, me too. I would also turn him in....



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luelee1985

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...minding his own business as he went out for a walk:


Union City's police chief learned of a disturbing assault on a Sikh man. Then he found out the alleged attacker was his son



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HqO2tfFrYU

Union City Police Chief Darryl McAllister was mingling with residents Tuesday at National Night Out when members of the Sikh community brought a disturbing crime to his attention.

About 6 a.m. a day earlier, two men had attempted to rob a 71-year-old Sikh man as he walked by a park in Manteca, about 10 miles south of Stockton. When the man refused to cooperate, one of the suspects knocked the man to the ground — twice. The suspects left the man in the street as they began to walk away. Moments later, the main attacker ran back and kicked the man several times as he lay on the pavement. The confrontation was caught on nearby security cameras and spread on social media and the news. In the video, the suspect appears to spit on the man before running off.

“The greater Sikh community is devastated,” McAllister said in a statement. “They asked me to weigh in on how we could prevent this type of horrific crime in Union City.”
Later that night, McAllister got a call from the Manteca Police Deparment: The man in the security video was his 18-year-old son.

“Words can barely describe how embarrassed, dejected, and hurt my wife, daughters, and I feel right now,” McAllister wrote in a lengthy Facebook post Wednesday afternoon. “Violence and hatred is not what we have taught our children; intolerance for others is not even in our vocabulary, let alone our values…. My stomach has been churning from the moment I learned this news.”
 
Manteca police arrested Tyrone McAllister, along with the second suspect in the video, a 16-year-old male, Wednesday morning.

Investigators identified the younger McAllister by connecting several pieces. The night before the attack, police stopped a car for a traffic violation. The officer’s body camera footage shows McAllister in the car, as a passenger, wearing the same clothes seen in the attack, said Manteca Police Sgt. Stephen Schluer.

Also, McAllister had recently gotten out of jail, and investigators found Twitter and Snapchat posts indicating that he needed money and planned to rob people, Schluer said. He posted a photo in the same clothing seen in video of the attack.

The elder McAllister said his son had been estranged from his family for several months after he began to “lose his way” a couple of years ago with a bad crowd. The police chief said his son spent several months in juvenile hall, and later three more months in jail, for theft-related incidents.

“Since being released he has been wayward and has not returned to our family home for several months,” the chief, who helped Manteca police track the 18-year-old down in Modesto, wrote in his Facebook post.
“My family is shaken to the core,” McAllister continued. “His sisters (one corporate and the other about to start law school), are at a loss to understand any of this. It's difficult for us to comprehend how one of three kids who grew up with the same parents, under the same roof, with the same rules and same values and character could wander so far astray. We simply don’t know why, or how we got here. In the eyes of the public, no matter the irrelevance to the incident, the fact remains that the father of the perpetrator of this despicable crime is a police chief, period.”

The younger McAllister, who investigators say was the primary aggressor, and the 16-year-old were arrested on suspicion of attempted robbery, elder abuse and assault with a deadly weapon. Police are investigating whether the attack amounts to a hate crime.

Friends; if a kid is raised in such an environment and the other children are law abiding and productive, than this boy was heavily influenced by his friends. All was well until my brothers made friends who taught them their bad behavior. The youngest struggled and is barely getting his life back together and the other is doing 20 years for assault and kidnapping. Both had poor judge of character and befriended trash.

Sent from my SM-J327V using Tapatalk




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Offline YAX

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Bought my first home in Manteca, back when homes were shooting up in value.  They were still developing a park across the street from my house.  Probably that one in the scene too.



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