Current:Home > ScamsWoman tried to drown 3-year-old girl after making racist comments, civil rights group says -Edge Finance Strategies
Woman tried to drown 3-year-old girl after making racist comments, civil rights group says
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:12:56
The Council on American-Islamic Relations is calling on authorities to investigate an alleged hate crime incident in Texas after a woman was charged with trying to drown a Muslim child at an apartment complex pool last month.
Elizabeth Wolf, 42, has been charged with attempted capital murder and injury to a child after she tried to drown a 3-year-old girl in an apartment pool on May 19, according to the Euless Police Department. Mustafaa Carroll, the executive director of the Texas chapter of CAIR, said the attack occurred after Wolf made racist comments to the girl's mother, who was wearing a hijab, an Islamic head covering.
"CAIR-Texas... calls upon state and federal law enforcement authorities to investigate an allegedly biased, motivated murder attempt targeting Muslim children in Euless, Texas, as a hate crime, and to take all precautions to keep the family safe and the Muslim community safe," Carroll said at a news conference on Saturday.
In addition to the hate crime probe, Carroll said CAIR-Texas is asking for a higher bail bond and an "open conversation with officials to address this alarming increase in Islamophobia, anti-Arab, and anti-Palestinian sentiment."
Wolf was initially arrested on a charge of public intoxication, Euless police said. Wolf was able to bail herself out of jail the day after her arrest, Carroll said.
Following further investigation, the Tarrant County District Attorney's Office filed the charges of attempted capital murder and injury to a child on May 23, The Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported.
Euless is a city in Tarrant County, Texas, and a suburb of Dallas and Fort Worth.
'Misleading statements':Anti-hate group ADL slams Wikipedia after site labels it ‘unreliable’ source on conflict
'My daughter is traumatized'
Officers responded to an apartment complex pool at around 5:44 p.m. on May 19 regarding a disturbance between two women, according to Euless police. Witnesses told officers that a woman "who was very intoxicated" had attempted to drown a child and argued with the child’s mother, police said.
Officers tried to contact the woman, who was identified as Wolf, as she tried to leave and was then arrested for public intoxication, police added.
Carroll said the mother, who he referred to as Mrs. H, was watching her two children in the shallow end of the pool when Wolf entered the area and approached the mother while making racist statements. The mother told detectives that Wolf questioned where she was from and if the two children were hers, according to police.
Police said the mother reported that Wolf then tried to grab her 6-year-old son but he pulled away, which caused a scratch on his finger. When the mother began helping her son, "Wolf grabbed 3-year-old daughter and forced her underwater," according to police.
CAIR-Texas alleged that Wolf also took the mother's hijab and used it to hit her as well as "kicking her to keep her away while forcing her daughter’s head underwater." Police said the mother was able to pull her daughter from the water as the 3-year-old yelled for help and was coughing up water.
The mother told CAIR-Texas that a man helped her rescue her daughter as others gathered and witnessed the incident. Medics evaluated both children, who were medically cleared, police said.
"Cuffed and taken away by the police officer, the attacker reportedly shouted to a bystander woman who was calming the mother down 'Tell her I will kill her, and I will kill her whole family,'" CAIR-Texas said in a news release.
During the news conference Saturday, Carroll read a statement from the mother, who said her family is originally from Palestine but are American citizens.
"I don’t know where to go to feel safe with my kids. My country is facing a war, and we are facing that hate here," wrote the mother. "My daughter is traumatized; whenever I open the apartment door, she runs away and hides, telling me she is afraid the lady will come and immerse her head in the water again."
The mother added that her husband's employment has been "jeopardized" after he had to leave his work to accompany her and their four kids for appointments and errands. CAIR-Texas has established a GoFundMe page to help support the family following the incident.
Rise in hate crimes against Muslims, Palestinians in United States
In CAIR's 2023 report, the organization recorded 8,061 complaints nationwide last year. That figure is the highest number of complaints ever recorded by CAIR in the organization's 30-year history, according to Carroll.
Nearly half of those complaints — 3,578 — occurred in the last three months of 2023, Carroll said. CAIR reported that the "primary force behind this wave of heightened Islamophobia was the escalation of violence in Israel and Palestine in October 2023."
Complaints included immigration and asylum cases, employment discrimination, education discrimination, and hate crimes and incidents. While complaints frequently were called in, some cases were documented by CAIR staff from news articles and other sources.
"Behind these numbers are human tragedies, and children appear to be the prime targets," Carroll said at the news conference Saturday.
He cited incidents that have occurred since last fall, including a 6-year-old Muslim boy who was stabbed and killed by his family's landlord in suburban Chicago. In December 2023, a Georgia middle school teacher was arrested after he was accused of threatening to behead a 13-year-old Muslim student.
Contributing: Krystal Nurse, USA TODAY
veryGood! (717)
Related
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Florida agriculture losses between $78M and $371M from Hurricane Idalia, preliminary estimate says
- Minnesota approves giant solar energy project near Minneapolis
- Why a 96-year-old judge was just banned from the bench for a year
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Man thought he was being scammed after winning $4 million from Michigan Lottery scratch-off game
- Iranian court gives a Tajik man 2 death sentences for an attack at a major Shiite shrine
- Ray Epps, man at center of right-wing Jan. 6 conspiracy, pleads guilty
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- A toddler lost in the woods is found asleep using family dog as a pillow
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- U.S. offers nearly half-a-million Venezuelan migrants legal status and work permits following demands from strained cities
- The world hopes to enact a pandemic treaty by May 2024. Will it succeed or flail?
- Former Mississippi Democratic Party chair sues to reinstate himself, saying his ouster was improper
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- TLC's Chilli Is Going to Be a Grandma: Son Tron Is Expecting Baby With His Wife Jeong
- Who are Rupert Murdoch’s children? What to know about the media magnate’s successor and family
- 9 deputies charged in death of man beaten in Memphis jail, including 2 for second-degree murder
Recommendation
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Gloria Estefan, Sebastián Yatra represent legacy and future of Latin music at D.C. event
Raiders All-Pro Davante Adams rips Bills DB for hit: That's why you're 'not on the field'
Maryland apologizes to man wrongly convicted of murder, agrees to pay $340,000 settlement: Long overdue
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
After a lull, asylum-seekers adapt to US immigration changes and again overwhelm border agents
Chicago officials ink nearly $30M contract with security firm to move migrants to winterized camps
Turkey’s central bank hikes interest rates again in further shift in economic policies