There’s no evidence that an alleged assault on a female Muslim high school student in Fairfax, Virginia was a hate crime, local police said.
The Dec. 14 incident involved a male student at Fairfax High School, who reportedly pushed a female Muslim student to the ground, pulled off her hijab, and beat her up, while calling her racial slurs, according to the advocacy group Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
An investigation conducted by the Fairfax Police Department, however, has found no evidence suggesting it was a hate crime.
The police also noted that Mohamed admitted that social media posts claiming the racial comments that were used during the incident were false.
“The female student confirmed her hijab became partially undone during the altercation, exposing her hair. The female student advised that the information posted on several social media sites, stating that racial comments were [sic] used during the altercation were false,” the Dec. 18 police statement concluded.
Abed Ayoub, the lawyer representing Mohamed, argued it was too early for the police to rule out hate crime charges.
“There’s multiple witnesses who can attest to racist and Islamophobic comments and overtures being made immediately prior to the incident into the assault,” Ayoub said, reported radio station WTOP. He didn’t say whether the witnesses will testify on behalf of his client.
The incident has also triggered a protest at Fairfax High School, during which hundreds of students skipped classes to join the walkout in support of the alleged victim. Fairfax County Public Schools told WTOP that around 350 students at the school “exercised their right to protest following an incident between two students that took place in school. ... Fairfax County Public Schools and City of Fairfax Schools support the rights of students to peacefully protest.”