Negro home invader attempts sexual assault on

White Boy

Registered
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Police: Man Invades Home, Cuts Sleeping Girl's Clothes
Intruder May Have Entered Through Unlocked Window

UPDATED: 2:28 pm EDT August 16, 2005

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Police are looking for a man they said broke into a central Ohio home Monday and may have tried to attack a child, WCMH-TV in Columbus reported.

Police said the intruder may have entered through an unlocked rear window.

"There were five children that were awoken by this guy," said Sgt. Brent Mull, of Columbus police. "He ended up stealing some items from the house."

The intruder is described as black, 5 feet 5 inches tall with a short Afro, Mull said.

Mull said the intruder tried to engage in sexual activity.

"There wa

s also some contact between a 12-year-old girl in there. We believe that he was attempting
to engage in some type of sexual activity with her
," Mull said.

Images From The Scene

Police said something scared the man and caused him to flee.

At about 6:30 a.m., residents in the house called police.

Mull said the intruder made a very bold move on the child.

"There were some tears in her clothing that indicated he used some type of cutting instrument to cut away her clothing," Mull said.

Although the man escaped, police said he left behind some forensic evidence.

Neighbor Pattie Boyd said the incident was scary.

"Oh my gosh, that's scary," Boyd said. "Just lock up all the time and keep the door locked."
 
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Activists say Texas Minutemen causing fear among day laborers
Aug 28, 2005, 11:33 AM Email to a Friend Printer Friendly Version

Fear of a civilian patrol group is prompting fewer contractors to pick up workers from Houston corners where day laborers congregate, some activists said.

Workers' fear over the Minuteman volunteers probably led to some day laborers also abandoning their usual corners, and the same concerns caused a day labor organizational meeting Saturday to be closed to the media, according to organizers.

"They're very scared," Maria Jimenez, a leader of the Coalition Against Intolerance and for Respect, said of the laborers in Sunday editions of the Houston Chronicle.

The Minuteman volunteers, a group seeking to r

educe illegal immigration, have announced that they will begin "Operation Spo
tlight" in Houston during October.

Volunteers will watch day laborers and write down the license plate numbers of contractors who pick them up.


Houston police stopped photographing day laborers in July after receiving pressure from illegal-immigrant rights groups.

But some illegal-immigrant advocates concede that the Minutemen might be encouraged to hear they're already having an effect.

"This is already starting," Juan Alvarez, another leader of the coalition, said of the fear. "We can't reverse it."

Such tension is divisive to a community and workers should respond to the Minutemen's arrival in a nonviolent manner, said Francisco Pacheco from the National Day Labor Organizing Network, based in Los Angeles.

"The situation here is becoming more delicate," he said after touring day labor sites Friday.

The coalition organized S
atur
day's meeting so the laborers could meet with Pacheco, who has worked in areas as Long Island, New York, where conflicts have resulted between resi
dents and day laborers.

Houston is home to an estimated 350,000 to 400,000 illegal aliens, according to demographers.

The Minuteman Civil Defense Corp., the national organization, drew attention earlier this year with its patrols of the Arizona-Mexico border. Chapters in Texas plan to patrol the 1,200-mile border area between Texas and Mexico.
 
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