A Student Planned a Mass Shooting at This University Before Police Stopped Him
Did Russia Just Threaten War Against the European Union?
Gavin Newsom's Latest Move Shows That He's Definitely Running for President
Democrats Really Thought They Were Doing Something With This Epstein 'Reveal'
Ilhan Omar Threatens Companies 'Collaborating' With Trump
Here's the Official IG Report on Secretary of War Pete Hegseth
Minnesota's Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan Thinks Somali Fraud Is Part of the 'Fabric'...
Ilhan Omar Was Asked About Minnesota's Fraud Problem. Her Answer Is Stunning.
As Eric Adams Leaves Office, Check Out His Parting Shot at Successor Zohran...
Erika Kirk Stands by Second Amendment After Charlie's Assassination: Not a Gun Problem
Trump Orders Flags to Half Staff After for Murdered Army Specialist Sarah Beckstrom
Josh Shapiro Blasts Kamala Harris Over Lies: 'She's Trying to Sell Books and...
Jaguar Fires Creative Chief Behind Disastrous Woke Rebrand
ICE Arrests Yet Another Afghan National With Terror Connections Just Miles From DC
Jeffrey Epstein’s Sexual Scandals Are Distractions From the Real Threats
Tipsheet

Police Investigating Mother's Day Assault on Military Vet Who was Called ‘White B*tch’ in Parking Lot

(AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley)

Louisville police are investigating an attack in a Kroger parking lot that left a disabled military veteran with a broken nose after an altercation on Mother's Day.

Advertisement

Pamela Ahlstedt-Brown was beaten after she addressed the occupants of a car that were blocking her from leaving her parking spot, Wave 3 News reported.

I get out and I say, "Do you guys need any help?" and she said, "F*** you, you white b****." I said, "Hold on, you don’t even know me.” I said, "That’s fine. If you don’t need anything, that’s fine. I’ll get back in the car."

She said the passengers of the vehicle were four black women and that after their aggressive comments, they proceeded to throw a cup at her and beat her. 

She said she was in a fetal position during the attack, trying to protect her eyes.

Strangers were able to intervene and break up the incident, but not before Ahlstedt-Brown suffered a broken nose.

Ahlstedt-Brown's husband Edward told Wave 3 News about the impact the assault had on him and their children:

It’s hard for us because we all feel like, well what if we would have been there? It makes you feel helpless. It was terrible for them and for me to have their mom come home in that condition.

After the attack, Ahlstedt-Brown said she is heartbroken, anxious, and has had nightmares but that she is grateful to have made it back to her family alive. 

She and her husband, who are in an interracial marriage and have biracial children, said they believe that race might have played a part in the assault. She is afraid a similar attack could occur if the perpetrators are not caught.

Advertisement

“I could have been killed, but I know how to protect myself,” she said. “I mean, I’m a strong person... It doesn’t mean everybody is this strong.”

Louisville police said that it will be up to the courts to determine if the attack would be classified as a hate crime, according to the Washington Examiner.

A spokesperson for the Louisville Metro Police Department said: 

We’re gonna collect all the evidence, present it in court, and they will decide. A hate crime is an enhancement, in this case, it’s an assault is where we are at at this time. The courts will eventually decide that.

The FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting Program for hate crimes reveals that hate crime offenses from black people increased by nearly 15 percent nationally since 2015. There were 1,336 known black offenders in 2015 and 1,532 in 2019.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement