Judge tells attacker to study Sikhs as part of sentence

Explore Business Standard
Associate Sponsors
Co-sponsor

A judge on Friday ordered an Oregon man to learn about the Sikh religion and submit a report to the court as part of his sentence for an attack on a Sikh shopkeeper in Salem, a civil rights group said.
Andrew Ramsey pleaded guilty to misdemeanour counts of intimidation and assault in the January 14 incident targeting Harwinder Singh Dodd, the Sikh Coalition, the largest Sikh civil rights organization in the US, said in a release.
The Intimidation count is considered a hate crime, it said.
Witnesses said Ramsey pulled on Dodd's beard after he refused to sell him cigarettes without an ID, punched him and pulled him to the ground. Bystanders restrained Ramsey until police arrived.
Dodd, who came to the US from India and owns the convenience store, noted in a written statement to the court that hate crimes are on the rise in America. The FBI says hate crimes increased by 40 per cent in Oregon from 2016 to 2017.
"He didn't see me as a person," Dodd said of Ramsey. "He attacked me because of how I look. Because of my turban and beard my religious articles of faith."
"Bigotry is the result of ignorance," Partridge said. "All of us are able to learn and benefit from cultures in our community."
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
First Published: May 25 2019 | 5:00 AM IST