Black woman attacked by men wielding lighter fluid, racial slurs - Beginner's level practice for spotting hate crime hoaxes.



An 18-year-old Black woman says she was attacked with lighter fluid and flame early Wednesday morning by white men yelling racial slurs. She sustained second- and third-degree burns.

Althea Bernstein works as an EMT while studying to be a paramedic and firefighter. She says she was on her way to her brother’s house at around 1 am Wednesday when she reached a stoplight on Gorham Street near State Street in downtown Madison. She doesn’t remember for sure which intersection it was.

“I was listening to some music at a stoplight and then all of a sudden I heard someone yell the N-word really loud,” she said in an interview Wednesday. “I turned my head to look and somebody’s throwing lighter fluid on me. And then they threw a lighter at me, and my neck caught on fire and I tried to put it out, but I brushed it up onto my face. I got it out and then I just blasted through the red light … I just felt like I needed to get away. So I drove through the red light and just kept driving until I got to my brother and Middleton.”

A police incident report says the assailants used a spray bottle to spray lighter fluid on her face.


She said she’s reasonably certain it was four white men who “looked like classic Wisconsin frat boys … Two of them were wearing all black, and then the other two were wearing jeans and a floral shirt,” she said. She said the way they walked made her think they were intoxicated.

She said she was aware that protests had been happening, but wasn’t participating. Protests following the arrest of Yeshua Musa were just winding down at around 1 am Wednesday.

In recent weeks, far-right counter-protesters have attended and disrupted Black Lives Matter protests wearing Hawaiian-style floral shirts.

Bernstein said she was able to drive to her brother’s and back home without significant pain because she was in shock — something she sees in other people regularly.

“I’ve had patients in shock and I know what shock is based on the textbook,” she said. “It’s so incapacitating, you don’t even realize what’s going on. My brain still got me home and my brain still got me to call my mom. I just remember my face was bleeding.”

Bernstein said her mother told her to call their health care provider, and the nurses on the line there told her she should call an ambulance.

“They were just like, ‘Wait a minute. Will you say that again? What’s happening?’ I was like, yeah, I got a little toasted,” she said.

She opted to drive herself to the UW Hospital emergency department rather than call for an ambulance as the nurses had suggested.

“I feel like fire (and) EMS workers make the worst patients,” she said.

Once there, she had to go through a decontamination routine to get the lighter fluid off her skin, as it was continuing to burn her.

“There was this guy and he washed my hair and scrubbed my back. And I was like, ‘Okay, this is not that bad. I’m going to have to come here more often for a shower,’” she said.

Then the painful part began.

“They had to pretty much scrub the skin off, which was extremely painful,” she said. “Burn pain is something I can’t even really describe. I don’t know how to describe it. It was horrible.”

And it’s not over yet — she will have appointments every few days to repeat the procedure, and will eventually need plastic surgery to repair the damage.

Althea2.jpg
Photo supplied.
Bernstein said she was advised not to contact police right away “because I was high as a kite” on pain medication. She finally got home at around 6:00 Wednesday morning and called police later in the day. She said she was told they wouldn’t be able to take a statement because they were too busy preparing for protests, but that they would investigate.

In an email Thursday, a Madison police spokesman confirmed that Bernstein had called police and had taken a statement Thursday morning. According to a police incident report, “Investigators are looking at surveillance images to see if any of the assault was captured on camera.”

She said beyond the physical pain is the pain of being the victim of a racist attack in her hometown.

“At first I didn’t even believe what had happened,” she said. I grew up in Madison, on the East side, and my dad would take me to the Farmer’s Market every weekend, on those same streets. It just felt so weird to have these really happy memories there, and then now to have this memory that sort of ruined all of the childhood memories. I never really knew someone could hate you just by looking at you. They didn’t know me. I didn’t know them. I was just driving my car and minding my own business.”

She struck a forgiving tone for the men who attacked her.

“I think everyone deserves a chance to improve. I hope they feel bad and make a change,” she said. “I’m glad it was me, and not someone like a pregnant woman, or a child, or someone who doesn’t have the health care that I do or the support system that I do.”

Bernstein said she and her family don’t need financial support at this time.

“We’ve thought about maybe a GoFundMe if there are legal expenses,” she said.

A GoFundMe campaign seeking to raise $10,000 for “medical and legal expenses, if they choose to,” was not authorized by the family, a family spokesperson said.

Rather than donate to support her directly, she said she wants people to “sign the petitions. Support the movement. Support Black lives.”

In a statement issued Thursday, Bernstein’s family said they have asked the Boys and Girls Club of Dane County and its CEO, Michael Johnson, to publicly represent them.

“Our family is saddened at what happened to Althea and the unprovoked attack on her body,” the statement reads. “At this time, our family is asking everyone to respect our privacy as Althea is recovering from the burns on her face and neck. Our family have asked the Boys & Girls Clubs CEO to serve as the contact for our family. The story on Madison365 accurately depicts her experience and we feel it’s in the best interest of Althea to heal and to seek treatment.”

This story has been updated to reflect a response and incident report from Madison Police Department and a statement from the victim’s family.


Police report:


I am posting this simply to give everyone a little practice in spotting hate crime hoaxes. This is an obvious example of one, essentially just shooting fish in a barrel. Your mission is to find as many signs that point towards a hoax and to list them below.
 
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see this is why slavery was a good thing....

Nah...slavery was actually pretty fucking horrible for the South. Mostly the upper classes could own an keep slaves so they were of no benefit to many middle or working class. Additionally, the greater supply drove down wages and set a fairly low wage floor making it harder to poor Whites to make it. The crops were pretty bad for the environment as it lead to degradation of the soil. Finally, slavery stifled innovation and cost American blood.

The government should have just bought everyone's slave around the time it was founded. Imagine America with no Black people.
 
Slavery would have just quietly gone away due to the expense of the slaves and lack of a suitable cash crop to pay for them until the mechanized cotton gin was invented by Eli Whitney. Separating seeds from cotton was an arduous task since the prior cotton gin designs didn't work well for American cotton varieties, and as such cotton farming was slowly dying.
 
Police still mum on investigation in alleged hate crime, 7 weeks later

Seven weeks after a biracial woman told police she had been sprayed with lighter fluid by a group of white men and then set on fire, police and the woman’s family say the investigation into the incident continues.

But little information about the June 24 incident has been released as the Madison police and the FBI continue to investigate. Madison police spokesman Joel DeSpain said Wednesday that he regularly checks with the lead detective on the case, along with the department’s Violent Crimes Unit, and said it is still an active investigation.

“There is nothing new to release at this time,” DeSpain said.

Althea Bernstein, 18, of Monona, told police she was stopped at a stoplight, possibly on West Gorham Street at State Street, around 1 a.m. on June 24 when four white men approached her vehicle. One yelled a racial epithet.

She told police one of the men sprayed her with lighter fluid through her open driver’s-side window, then threw a lighter or match at her, igniting the fluid on her face and neck.

She said they looked like “frat boys” and that two were wearing floral shirts and blue jeans. The other two, she said, were dressed all in black and were wearing masks.

Andrea Love Sumpter, an attorney who is acting as a spokeswoman for Bernstein and her family, said Wednesday in an email that Madison police “are still in regular contact and actively investigating the case.”

Bernstein, she said, “continues to deal with the trauma she experienced day by day.”

A month ago, she said she had advised the family against making statements to avoid compromising the work of investigators.

In the meantime, police have not released any surveillance camera images, as they did in other recent cases that led to arrests in the June 24 attack on state Sen. Tim Carpenter, D-Milwaukee, and in the arrest of Marquon Clark, 26, of Madison, a “person of interest” in the firebombing of the City-County Building, which happened the same night. Police have also released images of other persons of interest in the CCB incident.

The Bernstein incident has been a much-debated topic of discussion on social media, with many asking why police have not released any further information since it was initially reported.


Sam Hyde got away with another one.
 
Police still mum on investigation in alleged hate crime, 7 weeks later




Sam Hyde got away with another one.
He can't keep getting away with this!

I wonder how seriously these obviously fake hate crimes get treated internally? Sure, they have to investigate, but when a "victim" comes in without visible burns claiming to have been set on fire with no other description of the perps than "those white devils", what the fuck do you do besides shit talk around the water cooler?
 
Nah...slavery was actually pretty fucking horrible for the South. Mostly the upper classes could own an keep slaves so they were of no benefit to many middle or working class. Additionally, the greater supply drove down wages and set a fairly low wage floor making it harder to poor Whites to make it. The crops were pretty bad for the environment as it lead to degradation of the soil. Finally, slavery stifled innovation and cost American blood.

The government should have just bought everyone's slave around the time it was founded. Imagine America with no Black people.
If you think competing for jobs with illegal immigrants is bad, imagine competing against slaves...

The US government was pretty broke and in debt post American Revolution. Buying all the slaves at that point wasn't feasible, assuming plantation owners would even be willing to take that sort of short term gain, long term loss to begin with, which is unlikely. The closest the country ever came to that was the American Colonization Society, which resulted in the creation of Liberia. Amusingly, Americo Liberians went on to basically become the Rhodies/Afrikaaners of Liberia, forming a segregated society where they had sole control of the government and occupied all the other administrative positions. Almost like the white devil and his racism wasn't the reason that kept happening...
 
Why hasn't she been arrested for filing a false police report yet? How much more blatant does it need to be?
Go ahead. You arrest this woman for filing a false report in the absolute shitshow we have going on now. Guarantee you the department just wants this shit to disappear so they don't end up with Burn Loot Murder and Antifa doing their usual using her rightful arrest as an excuse. No doubt the detectives have dropped hints as subtle as a brick to the head about wanting her to just drop it along the lines of "We doubt we can find the persons without more information". and "Your story needs extra corroboration."
 
No doubt the detectives have dropped hints as subtle as a brick to the head about wanting her to just drop it along the lines of "We doubt we can find the persons without more information". and "Your story needs extra corroboration."
I'm sure that's what they told Althea, but I wouldn't be surprised if they were more direct with her parents, telling them something along the lines of "Your daughter's story isn't making any sense. It would probably be in her best interest if she dropped this before anyone is forced to take a closer look at it."
 
Madison Police chief denies claim teen pressured to recant hate crime report
https://wkow.com/2020/08/26/madison...im-teen-pressured-to-recant-hate-crime-claim/ (https://archive.vn/jbG3v)

Madison's Police chief denies a claim made by a protest leader that detectives asked a teenager who maintained she was the victim of a disturbing, hate crime to recant her story.

Authorities say, Althea Bernstein, 18, of Monona, reported she was driving near State Street on a June night of protest when four white men called her a racial slur, tossed a flammable liquid on her, and then threw a lighter or match on her to ignite it. The teenager said she was able to put out flames but was burned. Shortly after the incident, Bernstein did an interview on ABC's Good Morning America and related the same story.

A protest leader told a group of one hundred people in downtown Madison Tuesday that she was not only outraged over the Kenosha Police shooting of Jacob Blake, but also of the treatment of Bernstein.

"Madison Police asked her to revise her statement...and admit she lied," the protest leader maintained, refusing to reveal her name to 27 News. "And these white men set her on fire. She still doesn't have justice. She's still afraid," the protest leader said.

"That's inaccurate," Interim Madison Police Chief Vic Wahl told 27 News of the claimed request of the teenager to recant. "I can tell you we've spent hundreds of hours investigating that case. It remains an open investigation."

The protest leader tells 27 News she does not speak for Bernstein or her family. Bernstein's spokesperson, attorney Andrea Sumpter has yet to respond to a request for comment from 27 News.

27 News representatives have made several requests of Madison Police for any video they may possess of the intersection of State and West Gorham streets, or nearby streets, at the time on June 24 Bernstein says the incident took place. But each request has been denied by police custodians, citing the ongoing investigation.

On the same evening of the incident involving the teen, authorities say protesters toppled statues, attacked a state lawmaker, and Madison's City-County Building was firebombed.

There is a $10,000 reward for information leading to arrests and convictions in connection to the burning of Bernstein.

---

It's the for the police and DA to charge her for false report of a crime. I know they won't do it in the current climate, but it's time.
 
Madison Police chief denies claim teen pressured to recant hate crime report
https://wkow.com/2020/08/26/madison...im-teen-pressured-to-recant-hate-crime-claim/ (https://archive.vn/jbG3v)

Madison's Police chief denies a claim made by a protest leader that detectives asked a teenager who maintained she was the victim of a disturbing, hate crime to recant her story.

Authorities say, Althea Bernstein, 18, of Monona, reported she was driving near State Street on a June night of protest when four white men called her a racial slur, tossed a flammable liquid on her, and then threw a lighter or match on her to ignite it. The teenager said she was able to put out flames but was burned. Shortly after the incident, Bernstein did an interview on ABC's Good Morning America and related the same story.

A protest leader told a group of one hundred people in downtown Madison Tuesday that she was not only outraged over the Kenosha Police shooting of Jacob Blake, but also of the treatment of Bernstein.

"Madison Police asked her to revise her statement...and admit she lied," the protest leader maintained, refusing to reveal her name to 27 News. "And these white men set her on fire. She still doesn't have justice. She's still afraid," the protest leader said.

"That's inaccurate," Interim Madison Police Chief Vic Wahl told 27 News of the claimed request of the teenager to recant. "I can tell you we've spent hundreds of hours investigating that case. It remains an open investigation."

The protest leader tells 27 News she does not speak for Bernstein or her family. Bernstein's spokesperson, attorney Andrea Sumpter has yet to respond to a request for comment from 27 News.

27 News representatives have made several requests of Madison Police for any video they may possess of the intersection of State and West Gorham streets, or nearby streets, at the time on June 24 Bernstein says the incident took place. But each request has been denied by police custodians, citing the ongoing investigation.

On the same evening of the incident involving the teen, authorities say protesters toppled statues, attacked a state lawmaker, and Madison's City-County Building was firebombed.

There is a $10,000 reward for information leading to arrests and convictions in connection to the burning of Bernstein.

---

It's the for the police and DA to charge her for false report of a crime. I know they won't do it in the current climate, but it's time.
I have no trouble believing that an investigator, frustrated with the amount of time and resources being given to this obvious hoax at a time when law enforcement is already under enormous strain, said something to either her or her parents, but that it's not the official position of the department.
 
I have no trouble believing that an investigator, frustrated with the amount of time and resources being given to this obvious hoax at a time when law enforcement is already under enormous strain, said something to either her or her parents, but that it's not the official position of the department.

It could have even been said out of genuine concern that she not end up with some kind of charges on her criminal record. Kind of like when you were a young kid playing checkers and grandpa would say, "Are you sure that's the move you want to make?" Giving you a hint that you just fucked up but there's still time to change it.
 
These stupid protesters are going to force the police to show the evidence they have gathered that proves she was lying in her initial report. There's a reason why the initial PR person quit and was replaced by a lawyer who does criminal defense. If she really had been attacked, she would have capitalized on it to make a name for herself. The fact that she has been laying low and staying out of the limelight (and that the media has just dropped all mention of the whole thing) tells me that she is just trying to make it all go away.

Hope the protesters keep saying shit like this and the police are forced to tell the public that it was another Smollet case.
 
Lots and lots of camera footage in article:



Police, federal law enforcement find no evidence biracial Madison woman was attacked
Madison police announced Friday morning that they were not able to corroborate allegations made by a Madison woman that she was burned by four white men in Downtown Madison in June in what was initially reported as a hate crime.
Althea Bernstein, 18, of Monona, told police she had a lighter fluid sprayed on her and was set on fire in the early morning hours of June 24 by four white men after one of them yelled a racial epithet.

But in a statement Friday morning, Madison police said it was closing the case because "after an exhaustive probe, detectives were unable to corroborate or locate evidence consistent with what was reported."

The case was also investigated by the FBI and the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, and in its owns statement Friday morning, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Western District of Wisconsin said that "after reviewing all available evidence, authorities could not establish that the attack, as alleged by the complainant, had occurred."

Bernstein's family said in a statement that it appreciated "the detailed investigative efforts by all involved in this case," asked for privacy and said it would not be granting interviews.

"Althea's injuries are healing and the support of our community has been invaluable in that regard," they said.

Police released a timeline of the events of the night in a nearly three-minute-long video and 23-page report, and also released the 157-page report in the case.

Bernstein's allegation garnered national and even international attention. She was interviewed on "Good Morning America" two days after she reported it and Meghan Markle and Prince Harry of the British royal family reached out her her as well.

At the time the report was made, Madison and Dane County officials condemned the alleged attack, wiht Mayor Satya Rhodes-Conway calling it "a horrifying and absolutely unacceptable crime that .... may have been a premeditated crime targeted toward people of color."

Madison Area Crime Stoppers and the Mizel Family Foundation and Center for Combating Antisemitism offered a combined $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the perpetrators.

In a statement Friday, Rhodes-Conway said she had asked acting police chief Vic Wahl for updates on the case every week since June and "I believe MPD took it seriously."

But there had been questions about the veracity of the woman's report because, unlike in other crimes that occur Downtown, police never released video stills of the incident or possible suspects in attempt to find the perpetrators.

Very little of the public parts of Downtown are hidden from dozens of city-owned cameras and other private surveillance cameras police have access to.

Wahl said the department is not recommending Bernstein be charged with obstructing an officer, which can apply in cases in which a person makes a false police report. The U.S. Attorney's office was not immediately available for comment, but Wahl said he doubted it would pursue charges against Bernstein either.

"We were unable to corroborate (Bernstein's story), but we are not speculating on what did and did not happen," he said.
He said there is a difference between actively trying to deceive law enforcement and law enforcement not being able to corroborate a report of a crime, and he said Bernstein and her family have cooperated with investigators throughout the investigation.

"She has not offered any alternative explanation" of what happened to her, said Wahl, and he confirmed that the injuries she suffered are consistent with burns.

Bernstein said the attack happened at around 1 a.m., or about 20 minutes after a group of people threw a Molotov cocktail through a window of the City-County Building in the Downtown, starting a small fire.

The firebombing was part of a larger Black Lives Matter protest in which protesters tore down two statues on the Capitol Square, including one of a Union Civil War soldier and abolitionist. The protest had started in response to the arrest hours before of a local Black Lives Matter activist now facing state and federal charges for allegedly trying to extort money from at least one Downtown business.

The timeline released by police includes surveillance video images of Bernstein's vehicle within a few blocks of the CCB in the minutes after it was set on fire, but Wahl said it was "pretty clear" from the investigation that Bernstein was not a perpetrator or a victim in the CCB attack.

Michael Johnson, president and CEO of the Boys and Girls Club of Dane County, had acted as the family's spokesman in the days after the alleged incident. He said Friday that acting police chief Vic Wahl and Mayor Satya Rhodes-Conway briefed him and other "community leaders" about the closing of the Bernstein case Friday morning.

"I appreciate the time federal authorities and local law enforcement officials put into this case. In the meantime, we will continue to provide support to Althea and hope and pray for her healing and well-being," he said in a statement.
Rhodes-Conway's office, which according to Wahl organized the meeting with community leaders, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on who or what groups were briefed.

Bernstein had told police she was stopped at a stoplight, possibly on West Gorham Street at State Street, at around 1 a.m. June 24 when she was approached by four white men, one of whom yelled a racial epithet.

One of the men sprayed her with lighter fluid through her open driver's-side window and then threw a lit lighter or match at her, she said, setting her face and neck on fire before she patted out the flames. Her family later released photos of her showing burns to her face.

She described the men as looking like "frat boys" — two of whom were wearing "floral shirts" and blue jeans and two of whom were in all black and wearing masks. The man who allegedly sprayed her was wearing a "salmon-colored" floral shirt, she told police.

A surveillance camera at Gorham and State captured images of her vehicle at 12:44 a.m., according to the city's timeline, but nothing to substantiate the alleged attack. Police also did not find any fire damage in the 2007 Hyundai Elantra she had been driving, according to police reports, and a dog trained to sniff out accelerants did not find evidence of them of in the car.

The timeline released by police tracks Bernstein's movements and her vehicle for about two and a half hours beginning around 12:15 a.m., ending with what appears to be a redacted photo of Bernstein in a hospital gown around 3 a.m. at the UW Hospital emergency room on the Near West Side.

According to the timeline and electronic messages reviewed by police, Bernstein first mentions the alleged attack while at home in Monona at 1:24 a.m.

"Some (expletive) up (expletive) just happened," she tells a person named "Nick." "Someone on state street tried to set me on fire ... yelled the n word and threw beer and a lighter at me ... its still burning my skin ... it was a group of white guys."
A little more than a half hour later, surveillance images and her phone place her at UW Hospital.

This story will be updated.
 
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