Washington Police Searching for Group of Teens That Beat, Stomp Man Outside Hilton Hotel

Washington Police Searching for Group of Teens That Beat, Stomp Man Outside Hilton Hotel
A photo of Hilton Hotel in Washington. Wikimedia Commons
Bill Pan
Updated:

Washington police are looking for a group of teenage suspects who assaulted a man outside Washington Hilton Hotel earlier this month.

The Metropolitan Police Department uploaded surveillance footage showing the assault to its official YouTube channel on July 24.

In a statement released on the same day, police said they are looking for suspects in the aggravated assault outside the Hilton in the 1900 block of Connecticut Avenue, Northwest.

The video was shot on a nearby surveillance camera on July 14, at approximately 1:00 a.m., according to the Washington police.  In the video, the male victim can be seen walking toward the revolving door of the hotel before he was approached and confronted by a male suspect, whom police believe is a teenager.

The situation quickly escalated to violence after the youngster threw a punch in the victim’s face. The victim, staggering, tried to distance himself from the assailant, only to have another young male hit his head from behind, effectively knocking him down.

Surveillance footage shows a group of 14 teenage males and females assaulting tourists outside the Hilton Hotel in Washington on the early morning of July 14. (screenshot/Metropolitan Police Department)
Surveillance footage shows a group of 14 teenage males and females assaulting tourists outside the Hilton Hotel in Washington on the early morning of July 14. screenshot/Metropolitan Police Department

A group of about 14 teenage males and females then ran up and began repeatedly kicking and stomping the man who was helplessly lying on the ground on his stomach.

One of them stomped on his head, and as the group begins to leave, another female stopped to spit on the victim as he lied motionlessly on the ground.

The victim, whose identity remains unreleased, suffered non-life threatening injuries, police said.

The assault took place only steps from the site of former U.S. President Ronald Reagan’s attempted assassination in March 1981.

Police and Secret Service agents reacting during the assassination attempt on then US president Ronald Reagan, after a conference outside the Hilton Hotel in Washington, on March 30, 1981. (just behind the car). Reagan was hit in the chest and was hospitalized for 12 days. Hinckley was acquitted 21 June 1982 after a jury found him mentally unstable. (Mike Evens/AFP/Getty Images)
Police and Secret Service agents reacting during the assassination attempt on then US president Ronald Reagan, after a conference outside the Hilton Hotel in Washington, on March 30, 1981. (just behind the car). Reagan was hit in the chest and was hospitalized for 12 days. Hinckley was acquitted 21 June 1982 after a jury found him mentally unstable. Mike Evens/AFP/Getty Images

Washington police request anyone who can identify these individuals or who has knowledge of this incident to take no action themselves but call police at (202) 727-9099 or text his or her tip to the Department’s TEXT TIP LINE to 50411.

“Crime Solvers of Washington, DC currently offers a reward of up to $1,000 to anyone who provides information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for a crime committed in the District of Columbia,” said the statement.

Washington’s criminal code defines aggravated assault as a person purposefully or knowingly causes serious bodily injury to another person, or under circumstances that demonstrate an extreme indifference to human life, a person intentionally or knowingly does something which creates a grave risk of severe bodily injury to another and as a result causes serious bodily injury.

Aggravated assault carries the penalty of a felony conviction, a fine of no more than $25,000, up to 10 years in prison, or both. Attempted aggravated assault also carries severe penalties of a felony conviction, a fine of up to $12,500, up to five years in prison, or both.

Bill Pan
Bill Pan
Reporter
Bill Pan is an Epoch Times reporter covering education issues and New York news.
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