logo
Native Hawaiian man could face longer prison sentence after conviction for hate crime against white man

Native Hawaiian man could face longer prison sentence after conviction for hate crime against white man

Fox News11-07-2025
A Native Hawaiian man who was convicted of a hate crime against a white man must be re-sentenced, a U.S. appeals court ruled on Thursday, potentially leading to additional years in prison.
Kaulana Alo-Kaonohi was sentenced by a Honolulu judge in 2023 to six-and-a-half years after a jury found him and another Native Hawaiian man, Levi Aki Jr., guilty.
The jury found the pair to be motivated by race when they punched, kicked and used a shovel to beat Christopher Kunzelman in 2014 for attempting to move into their remote village in Maui.
Alo-Kaonohi appealed the conviction, and prosecutors cross-appealed, challenging the judge's ruling that the hate crime enhancement could not be applied to the sentence.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel also ruled on Thursday to affirm Alo-Kaonohi's conviction.
It was unclear exactly how much longer Alo-Kaonohi could be required to spend behind bars.
Aki's appeal, along with prosecutors' cross-appeal of Aki's sentence of about four years, were voluntarily dismissed, court records show.
Kunzelman's wife, Lori Kunzelman, told The Associated Press on Thursday that she is glad prosecutors pushed for a longer sentence.
The Kunzelmans purchased a dilapidated, oceanfront house because they wanted to leave Arizona after Lori Kunzelman's multiple sclerosis diagnosis.
"We had vacationed on Maui year after year — loved, loved, loved Maui," she said, noting that they saw the home as an affordable opportunity that her husband could fix up.
She said the beating of her husband destroyed her marriage, explaining that her husband suffered brain injuries that led them to go through a divorce.
Christopher Kunzelman was traveling in Europe and unavailable to address the ruling.
The pair still own the property but they do not know what to do with it, Lori Kunzelman said.
"The families there won't allow anybody to step foot on that property," she said. "There's so much animosity."
The use of the word, "haole," a Hawaiian word with meanings that include foreigner and white person, was central to the case. Dennis Kunzelman testified that the men called him "haole" in a derogatory way.
Attorneys for Alo-Kaonohi and Aki said it was Christopher Kunzelman's entitled and disrespectful attitude that irked them, not his race.
The Hawaii Innocence Project plans to take up the case, according to the group's co-director, Kenneth Lawson. The organization seeks to argue that an ineffective defense did not present to the jury the history of the word "haole" in Hawaii to show it is not a derogatory term.
"I just don't believe that it's a hate crime," Lawson said.
Lawson also said the defense should have called white, non-Hawaiian residents as witnesses to testify that they lived in the village without any racial issues.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Student killed in stabbing at high school after fight escalates: Police
Student killed in stabbing at high school after fight escalates: Police

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Student killed in stabbing at high school after fight escalates: Police

A student was killed in a stabbing at a Phoenix high school on Tuesday in what school officials called a "senseless tragedy." The incident occurred at Maryvale High School, officials said. Officers responded to the school around 11 a.m. to a call for a stabbing, Phoenix police said. Phoenix Commander David Saflar said the incident "started off with a fight between two students, and escalated." MORE: Search on for suspect who stabbed ranger in state park near Denver: Police School staff notified the on-campus school safety officer, who detained one of the people involved, according to Phoenix Police Chief Matt Giordano. Two students were transported to an area hospital, including one with life-threatening injuries, police said. A male student has since died, officials said. "What happened today at Maryvale is truly a tragedy," Saflar said at a press briefing Tuesday. No additional suspects are being sought, he said. The Phoenix Police Department is investigating the incident. No further details are being released at this time, said police, who have not provided any details on the weapon used in the stabbing or the students involved. Authorities urged anyone with information, including any cellphone footage, to reach out to police. Phoenix Union High School District Superintendent Thea Andrade said the district is cooperating fully with the investigation. "Maryvale is a beautiful, resilient community and I am shocked and deeply saddened by what took place here today," Andrade said at the press briefing, calling the incident a "senseless tragedy." The school will be on a modified schedule on Wednesday to provide "extensive emotional support and counseling to our students and to our staff," Andrade said. MORE: Texas teen indicted for murder in fatal stabbing of another student at track meet Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego thanked the first responders and police and said more information will be released as it becomes available. "Tomorrow, it will be a hard moment to drop a kid off at school, and so to the parents out there, know that we are working as hard as we can to make sure that schools are as safe as possible," Gallego said at the briefing. Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne called the deadly stabbing a "terrible tragedy." "Schools must be safe places," Horne said in a statement. "This terrible incident reinforces my commitment to doing everything possible to make schools safe.'

Former Miami Heat security officer pleads guilty to stealing and selling millions of dollars' worth of team memorabilia
Former Miami Heat security officer pleads guilty to stealing and selling millions of dollars' worth of team memorabilia

CNN

time27 minutes ago

  • CNN

Former Miami Heat security officer pleads guilty to stealing and selling millions of dollars' worth of team memorabilia

Basketball PolicingFacebookTweetLink Follow A former Miami Heat security officer pleaded guilty Tuesday to transporting and transferring millions of dollars' worth of team memorabilia, federal prosecutors announced Tuesday. Marcos Tomas Perez, 62, changed his plea from not guilty to guilty at a hearing Tuesday, according to the US Attorney's Office in the Southern District of Florida, admitting to the facts of the case. 'He's depressed, naturally, but he accepts responsibility for his behavior and we're gonna work through this issue in his life,' his attorney Robert Buschel said after the hearing, according to NBC Miami, which Buschel later confirmed to CNN. Perez worked with the NBA team for five years from 2016 to 2021 and later with the league from 2022 to 2025. During his time with Miami, Perez was a part of the security detail team on game days at the now-named Kaseya Center, home of the Heat, court documents state. Perez accessed a secured equipment room that housed valuable memorabilia multiple times, stealing more than 400 game-worn jerseys and other items that were intended for a future Heat museum. Perez later sold the items to online brokers, according to court documents. Perez sold more than 100 of the stolen items, worth approximately $1.9 million and shipped them across state lines, often below fair market value. He sold a LeBron James NBA Finals jersey for nearly $100,000, which was later sold for $3.7 million at a Sotheby's auction, according to the court documents. In April, law enforcement executed a search warrant at Perez's residence and recovered close to 300 more game-worn jerseys and memorabilia, according to prosecutors. The Heat confirmed the items were taken from the arena. Perez, who is a retired 25-year officer for the City of Miami Police Department, is scheduled to be sentenced on October 31. He faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison, three years of supervised release and a maximum fine of $250,000. 'I hope that the judge will consider all factors in his life and his history as a good person, he was an exemplary police officer in the City of Miami, he's been retired for close to 10 years,' Buschel added, according to NBC Miami. 'This was an unfortunate set of decisions that he made and he's going to accept responsibility for that.' The Heat declined to comment.

Winters man gets 30 days in prison for sexually assaulting woman on flight from Seattle to Sacramento
Winters man gets 30 days in prison for sexually assaulting woman on flight from Seattle to Sacramento

CBS News

time28 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Winters man gets 30 days in prison for sexually assaulting woman on flight from Seattle to Sacramento

A federal judge on Tuesday sentenced a Northern California man to 30 days in prison for sexually assaulting a woman last year on a flight from Seattle to Sacramento, prosecutors announced. Jeff Lorenzo, 40, sexually assaulted a 20-year-old woman who sat between him and a co-worker of his on an August 9, 2024, flight, the U.S. Attorney's Office Eastern District of California said. Prosecutors said Lorenzo repeatedly touched the woman without her consent, grazing her leg with his hand, pressing his arm into her breast and, at one point, putting his head near her crotch under the pretense of retrieving his dropped phone. Lorenzo's inappropriate behavior allegedly was not isolated to this incident. His co-workers told authorities that he had a history of harassment and acting inappropriately toward women. Lorenzo is from the Yolo County town of Winters, located about 30 miles from the city of Sacramento.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store