
Asian American professor who teaches history of racism attacked in possible hate crime
Aki Maehara, a 71-year-old Asian American history professor, suffered serious injuries to his elbow, neck, cheekbones, jaw, hips and lower back, he told The Times in an interview on Monday.
Maehara was riding his electric bicycle on Merle Drive in Montebello, not far from his home, around 10 p.m. on April 29 when headlights from a car approaching him from behind illuminated his path. He turned to check his surroundings and saw a sedan speeding toward him, he said.
'I tried to turn toward the curb to see if there was a driveway when I got hit,' he said.
Before he was struck, he heard someone yell an expletive followed by a racial slur targeting people of Chinese descent, he said. He skidded across a yard and was stopped by a brick wall. Maehara said he heard a man's voice: 'Go back to...' using an expletive and a racial slur, before the car drove off.
'It sounded suspicious to me because I wear a full-face helmet ... a helmet with a visor,' Maehara said. 'No one can see my face. So how the hell did he know I'm Asian?'
Maehara said he couldn't afford to incur the cost of an ambulance ride, so he called friends who took him to the VA hospital in Long Beach.
Montebello police said they have contacted residents in the neighborhood for security camera footage, but have been unable to find video that captured the incident.
Though no arrests have been made, Maehara said he has a suspect in mind and shared their name with police. He said he's been targeted for harassment before because of his job at East Los Angeles Community College teaching the history of racism and racist beliefs in U.S. history.
'There's a long history,' he said. 'They've picketed my classroom at East L.A. College. Chicano Republicans came after me and picketed me at Cal State Long Beach. The KKK came to my classroom at Cal State Long Beach when I was teaching a course on the U.S. Vietnam War. This is not the first time I've been targeted.'
One of his friends, Glorya Cabrera, created a GoFundMe page to raise money for his recovery, writing that Maehara urgently needs in-home care for his injuries. The VA hospital has provided him with in-home care for a few hours two days a week, but Maehara is hoping the donations will help him get additional care as he heals.
'Hate crimes are on the rise due to the vile rhetoric being used by those in Washington and in the so-called MAGA Extreme Christian Right who feel justified in their violence directed towards non-white citizens,' Cabrera wrote.
Police are continuing to search for the driver.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Epoch Times
7 minutes ago
- Epoch Times
The CCP's Threat to America's Undersea Surveillance Network
The Chinese ship, the bulk carrier Yi Peng 3 (R), is anchored and being monitored by a Danish naval patrol vessel in the sea of Kattegat, near Jutland, Denmark, on Nov. 20, 2024. Denmark's navy said on Nov. 20, 2024, it was shadowing a Chinese cargo vessel in the Baltic Sea, a day after Finland and Sweden opened investigations into suspected sabotage of two severed undersea telecoms cables. Mikkel Berg Pedersen/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images

USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Eric Adams adviser accused of bribery after giving reporter cash inside potato chip bag
A former City Hall adviser to New York City Mayor Eric Adams and, until Thursday, Aug. 21, a volunteer for his reelection campaign, reportedly gave a local reporter a wad of cash stuffed inside a bag of potato chips. The non-profit news outlet The City reported the encounter late Wednesday, Aug. 20, a few hours after Winnie Greco allegedly handed an open bag of Herr's sour cream and onion rippled potato chips to journalist Katie Honan following a Harlem campaign event. Initially, Honan thought it was simply a 'light snack,' but after they parted ways, she looked inside the bag and discovered a red envelope containing 'at least one $100 bill and several $20 bills.' Honan texted Greco soon after the discovery to let her know she couldn't accept the money and asked when she could return it. However, she did not receive a response. The City reported the incident to the NYC Department of Investigation, and federal prosecutors from the office of Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Joseph Nocella contacted The City's lawyers, as reported by the outlet. An investigator later retrieved the chip bag that contained the red envelope and cash. Adams and his broader campaign didn't have any immediate ties to the incident. A spokesperson for the Brooklyn U.S. attorney's office, John Marzulli, declined to comment when contacted by USA TODAY. Greco's attorney denied the incident was a payoff, according to a statement. In a statement to The City and the New York Times, a spokesperson for Adams' campaign said Greco has been suspended from all volunteer campaign-related activities and holds no position in the campaign. 'Mayor Adams had no prior knowledge of this matter,' spokesperson Todd Shapiro said. 'He has always demanded the highest ethical and legal standards, and his sole focus remains on serving the people of New York City with integrity.' With less than three months remaining until the general election, Adams is facing significant headwinds in his bid for a second term due to a scandal-filled tenure and consistently low polling numbers. The City and reporter Honan, who previously covered New York City for the Wall Street Journal, have reported extensively on the Adams administration, including on his federal indictment in 2024 and ongoing investigations and indictments of multiple former Adams staffers and associates. Honan's reporting has also focused on Greco's relationship with Adams. Who is Winnie Greco? Winnie Greco, the former director of Asian affairs for the city, has been a fixture in Adams' campaigns and the current administration. She has been a key fundraiser and acted as the main liaison between Adams and the Chinese American community. She resigned from her post at City Hall in October 2024 amid scrutiny over her close relationships with people and groups connected to China's communist regime, and after FBI agents searched two of her Bronx homes in March 2024 in connection with the U.S. attorney's office in Brooklyn. Although she no longer holds a position at City Hall, Greco has recently reemerged alongside Adams as he campaigns for a second term. In an interview with The City on Wednesday, Aug. 20, Greco was asked what her intention was in handing money to the reporter. In response, the news outlet reported she said she'd made a mistake and apologized. 'I'm so sorry," she told The City. "It's a culture thing. I don't know. I don't understand. I'm so sorry. I feel so bad right now. I'm so sorry, honey.' In a separate call later that evening, Greco said: "I just wanted to be her friend. I just wanted to have one good friend. It's nothing.' Greco's attorney, Steven Brill, in a statement to The City, called the money a gesture of friendship and gratitude in Chinese culture. He also told USA TODAY in a statement that while it "looks odd," it would make more sense and carry less negative connotation "if one understood Winnie's generosity, and her sincere dedication to the Chinese culture." He told USA TODAY that Greco "apologized and asked for the traditional gift to be returned" once the reporter alerted her that she could not accept the money. "This was no payoff. This was no bag of cash in a dark alley," Brill said. "Any insinuation that this gift had a nefarious intent to influence this reporter or her coverage is misinterpreted and ridiculous." New indictments connected to Adams' administration The reports of Greco's attempted cash handoff to the reporter came hours before a new set of indictments was announced against another former Adams adviser. The Manhattan District Attorney announced on Thursday, Aug. 21, that former adviser Ingrid Lewis-Martin was under investigation for accusations that she engaged in several bribery schemes. Adams became the first sitting New York City mayor to face federal indictment last year, after charges were filed in September 2024 claiming he solicited and accepted illegal gifts and campaign donations from wealthy foreigners, including accepting luxury airline tickets, meals, and hotel stays. The mayor pleaded not guilty and has maintained his innocence. In April, the Department of Justice, under President Donald Trump, dismissed the corruption case against Adams. The controversial decision spurred more than half a dozen senior federal prosecutors to resign, and sparked a public outcry. Adams has been in NYC's public eye for decades, formerly serving as an NYPD Captain, a state senator and Brooklyn borough president. He was elected as mayor in 2021. Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her atkapalmer@ and on X @KathrynPlmr.

Epoch Times
2 hours ago
- Epoch Times
US Navy Sailor Convicted of Spying for China
A U.S. Navy sailor was convicted on Aug. 20 of spying for China and for selling sensitive information about American warships to a Chinese intelligence officer who recruited him through social media. Wei Jinchao, 25, who also goes by Patrick Wei, was born in China and became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 2022, according to prosecutors. He enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 2021 as a machinist's mate aboard the USS Essex, an amphibious assault ship homeported at Naval Base San Diego.