Current:Home > Invest1 more person charged in Alabama riverboat brawl; co-captain says he 'held on for dear life' -Edge Finance Strategies
1 more person charged in Alabama riverboat brawl; co-captain says he 'held on for dear life'
View
Date:2025-04-15 14:03:02
Police in Montgomery, Alabama, say another person has been charged in an Aug. 5 brawl on the city's riverfront during which the co-captain of a cruise ship said he "held on for dear life" as he was pummeled by boaters.
The 42-year-old man who turned himself in Friday was charged with disorderly conduct and is in jail, said Capt. Jarrett Williams of the Montgomery Police Department in an email. Police had sought the man for questioning because they believed he swung a folding chair during the incident.
A total of 13 people were detained in the aftermath of the brawl, which happened in Montgomery's Riverfront Park. Three men and one woman were charged with third-degree assault, which is a misdemeanor offense in Alabama, as is disorderly conduct. One man initially charged with misdemeanor assault in the attack has been cleared of wrongdoing, police said Friday. All those charged are from out of town, Mayor Steven Reed said in a news conference Tuesday.
Lottery legacy:What did a small-town family do with a $1.586 billion Powerball win?
Co-captain describes violent attack on Montgomery, Alabama, riverfront
Dameion Pickett, 43, described in a handwritten statement to authorities included in court documents how he was attacked after moving a pontoon boat a few feet so the Alabama River cruise ship, the Harriott II, could dock.
The ship's captain had asked a group on a pontoon boat "at least five or six times" to move from the riverboat’s designated docking space, but they responded by “giving us the finger and packing up to leave," Pickett said in the statement. Pickett, the boat's co-captain, and another member of the crew went ashore and moved the pontoon boat “three steps to the right,” he said.
After that, two people encountered him, threatening to beat him for touching the boat. The men argued that it was a public dock space, but Pickett said he told them it was the city’s designated space for the riverboat and he was “just doing my job.”
Riverfront brawl:3 men charged with assault after brawl at Riverfront Park in Montgomery, Alabama
Then, Pickett said he was punched in the face and hit from behind. “I went to the ground. I think I bit one of them. All I can hear Imma kill you” and beat you, he said. Pickett said he couldn’t tell “how long it lasted” and “grabbed one of them and just held on for dear life."
A second round of fights happened after the riverboat docked and several crew members approached the pontoon boat.
Police: Montgomery, Alabama, brawl not a hate crime
Videos of the incident – involving several white boaters, attacking Pickett, who is Black, and a teen deckhand, who is white and was punched – went viral and led to international news coverage. The deckhand’s mother heard a racial slur before Pickett was hit, she wrote in a statement.
Montgomery police said they consulted with the FBI and determined the incident did not qualify as a hate crime. Reed, the city’s first Black mayor, said he will trust the investigative process, but he said his “perspective as a Black man in Montgomery differs from my perspective as mayor.”
“From what we’ve seen from the history of our city – a place tied to both the pain and the progress of this nation – it seems to meet the moral definition of a crime fueled by hate, and this kind of violence cannot go unchecked,” Reed said. “It is a threat to the durability of our democracy, and we are grateful to our law enforcement professionals, partner organizations and the greater community for helping us ensure justice will prevail.”
Contributing: Francisco Guzman and Alex Gladden, The USA TODAY Network, The Associated Press
Follow Mike Snider on X and Threads: @mikesnider &mikegsnider.
What's everyone talking about? Sign up for our trending newsletter to get the latest news of the day
veryGood! (31)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello’s New PDA Pics Prove Every Touch Is Ooh, La-La-La
- Search for British actor Julian Sands resumes 5 months after he was reported missing
- Electric Cars Have a Dirty Little Secret
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Situation ‘Grave’ for Global Climate Financing, Report Warns
- Critically endangered twin cotton-top tamarin monkeys the size of chicken eggs born at Disney World
- Unlikely Firms Bring Clout and Cash to Clean Energy Lobbying Effort
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Electric Cars Have a Dirty Little Secret
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- U.S. Ranks Near Bottom on Energy Efficiency; Germany Tops List
- Keystone XL Wins Nebraska Approval, But the Oil Pipeline Fight Isn’t Over
- Renewable Energy Standards Target of Multi-Pronged Attack
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Coal Miner Wins Black Lung Benefits After 14 Years, Then U.S. Government Bills Him
- Search for missing Titanic sub yields noises for a 2nd day, U.S. Coast Guard says
- This Oil Control Mist Is a Must for Anyone Who Hates Sweaty and Shiny Skin
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Ireland Baldwin Shares Glimpse Into Her First Week of Motherhood With Baby Holland
Meet the 3 Climate Scientists Named MacArthur ‘Genius Grant’ Fellows
Climate Change Threatens a Giant of West Virginia’s Landscape, and It’s Rippling Through Ecosystems and Lives
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Does sex get better with age? This senior sex therapist thinks so
Unfamiliar Ground: Bracing for Climate Impacts in the American Midwest
Brittany Snow Hints She Was “Blindsided” by Tyler Stanaland Divorce