From News Nation:
“Hotel,
woman sued by family of Black teen falsely accused of stealing phone in viral
video”
The family of a
Black teenager who was falsely accused of stealing a woman’s cellphone at a
SoHo hotel last year filed a lawsuit Wednesday alleging that the woman and the
hotel engaged in racial profiling. Attorney Ben Crump filed the lawsuit on
behalf of Keyon Harrold Jr., 14, and his parents. The lawsuit alleged Arlo
Hotels violated New York City’s Human Rights Law, which prohibits discrimination
in public accommodations such as hotels. “There’s a person who looks at my son like a
shark and attacks him,” Harrold said. The family said the hotel “failed to
protect” Keyon in its lobby. The teen and his father, Keyon Harrold Sr., were
guests at the hotel while the woman who made the false accusation, Miya
Ponsetto, was not. Keyon’s parents said on Wednesday the teen is still upset
about the incident.
Keyon and his
father were exiting the Arlo SoHo Hotel lobby in December when Ponsetto
suddenly accused the teen of stealing her phone without providing any evidence
to suggest he was involved. The
encounter was recorded on cellphone video, which captured Ponsetto tackling
Keyon in an effort to take his own phone away from him. Security video later released
by the NYPD showed Ponsetto frantically grabbed at the teenager as he tried to
get away from her through the hotel’s front door. She then clutched him from
behind and both tumbled to the ground, the video showed. “It is assumed that we
are guilty. It is assumed that the burden of proof is on us,” said Crump. Ponsetto’s
phone was later returned to the hotel by an Uber driver. Critics on social
media dubbed Ponsetto the “SoHo Karen.”
Additionally,
the family said the hotel manager, Chad Nathan, empowered Ponsetto by asking
the teen to give up his own phone to prove his innocence. Ponsetto, Nathan and Arlo SoHo LLC are among
the defendants named in the lawsuit. A request for comment from Arlo Hotels was
not immediately returned. Paul D’Emilia, an attorney for Ponsetto, said his
client has not been informed of any lawsuit. Police also charged Ponsetto, who
lives in California, with attempted assault and other crimes in connection with
the incident. She was arrested in January. A judge gave Ponsetto supervised
release and granted orders of protection in favor of the victims. Ponsetto is
due back in criminal court on Monday.
^ In this case
the Hotel did immediately side with Ponsetto even though she was clearly
mentally unstable (as seen in the video.) Both deserve to be sued in civil
court and Ponsetto deserves to be criminally punished. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.