Lakhwant Singh (right), owner of Two Angels Liquors in Lakewood, Colorado, has been hospitalized since April 29, when a customer came into his store late night and began an altercation, later ramming his car into the 61-year-old man. “He is still unable to move,” Onkar Singh, Lakhwant’s son, told India-West, adding it will be at least another month before his father is able to leave a rehabilitation facility. (photo courtesy of Onkar Singh
LAKEWOOD, Colo. -- The Sikh community is demanding
justice for a store owner who was verbally and physically abused by a customer
in Lakewood.
The district attorney's office has filed attempted murder
charges against the suspect, but the family of the victim says that’s not good
enough. They want him to face hate crime charges.
Lakhwant Singh has lived in Colorado for over 20 years
and operates a convenience store in Lakewood.He is a member of the Sikh
community, a religious group originating in India.
"Sikhs maintain a physical and recognizable identity
with their faith which includes a turban and unshorn hair," Nikki Singh, a
family spokesperson and policy manager for the Sikh Coalition, told Denver.
Eric Breemen
An arrest affidavit in the case states Eric Breemen came
into the store back in April and just started knocking things off of the
counter."The attacker started going off on them, telling them that they
didn’t belong in this country, telling them that they were from the Middle
East," Amrith Kaur Aakre, legal director for the Sikh Coalition said.
Singh followed Breemen out of the store.
The report says Breemen attempted several times to run
over Singh and was eventually successful. “He had to have significant surgery
on his pelvis and he has metal plates throughout his body," Aakre said.
Singh had a broken arm, broken ribs, internal bleeding,
spinal fracture and needed staples in his head. He was in the hospital for over
a month and was recently transferred to a rehabilitation hospital for further
treatment. It will be years before he fully recovers and he doesn't have full
use of his hand.
"Before
this happened he and other members were doing a lot of work to provide supplies
and volunteer work to essential workers during COVID," Singh said.
Breemen faces a long list of
charges including attempted murder, but the Sikh community wants him charged
with a hate crime. They believe there is clear evidence the crime was motivated
by bias because Breemen told Singh to go back to his country and told officers
he was an Arab.
"Terrible
crimes of violence occurred here but that is not the underlying offense. The
underlying offense is the bias motivation," Aakre said.
The district attorney's office
is still investigating and more charges could be coming.
Breemen’s next court date is
July 24.
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