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Results tagged “hakimscott”
Two Sentenced To At Least 37 Years For Immigrant's Death

Two Sentenced To At Least 37 Years For Immigrant's Death

Two men who killed an Ecuadorean immigrant on a Brooklyn street in December 2008 were each sentenced today. Prosecutors had said that Keith Phoenix and Hakim Scott brutally beat Jose Sucuzhanay because they thought he was gay (Sucuzhanay was walking arm-in-arm with his brother) and yelled anti-Hispanic and anti-gay epithets during the attack. Phoenix got 37 years to life (25 years for murder as a hate crime, plus 12 years for attempted assault as a hate crime), while Scott received 37 years (25 years for manslaughter and 12 years for attempted assault). more ›

Jury Finds Man Guilty Of Murder As A Hate Crime In Immigrant's Killing

Jury Finds Man Guilty Of Murder As A Hate Crime In Immigrant's Killing

Yesterday, a jury took seven hours to convict a man of second degree murder as a hate crime and attempted assault as a hate crime in the killing of an Ecuadorean immigrant in December 2008. Keith Phoenix, whose previous trial ended in mistrial, now faces life in prison. more ›

Man Found Guilty Of Manslaughter, Not Hate Crime Or Murder

Man Found Guilty Of Manslaughter, Not Hate Crime Or Murder

Yesterday, a jury found Hakim Scott guilty of manslaughter in the 2008 fatal beating of an Ecuadorean immigrant. Prosecutors Scott and his friend Keith Phoenix attacked Jose Sucuzhanay and his brother because they thought the brothers were gay, since they were holding hands while walking down a Brooklyn street. Scott, who was acquitted of hate crime charges as well as murder, faces up to 40 years in prison. more ›

Violent Beating Described As Brooklyn Hate Crime Trial Begins

Violent Beating Described As Brooklyn Hate Crime Trial Begins

Nearly a year and a half after Jose Sucuzhanay was fatally beaten in Brooklyn, his accused killers are on trial. Prosecutors said that Keith Scott and Hakim Phoenix mistook Sucuzhanay and his brother for a gay couple (the brothers were tipsy) and shouted gay and racial epithets at them. Prosecutor Joshua Hanshaft said that Phoenix actually returned to deliver the final, fatal blows: Phoenix beat Sucuzhany "over and over again with the bat held high above his head... Jose tried to get up... and (Phoenix) came back with the bat and beat him two to three times on the head, cracking his skull wide open." more ›

Jury Selection Begins In Fatal Brooklyn Hate Crime

Jury Selection Begins In Fatal Brooklyn Hate Crime

Jury selection starts today for the trial of Hakim Scott and Keith Phoenix, who are accused of fatally beating Jose Sucuzhanay in Brooklyn last year. Police say Scott and Phoenix beat Sucuzhanay (pictured), an Ecuadorian immigrant who owned a real estate agency, because they thought he was gay (anti-gay and anti-Hispanic epithets were allegedly yelled), when he was really just tipsy and walking arm-in-arm with his brother. Cops also say Phoenix confessed ("So I killed someone—that makes me a bad guy?"), claiming self-defense. Scott recently turned down a plea deal for 18 years, insisting, "I didn't kill nobody." more ›

Hate Crime Murder Suspects' Friend Turns on Them

Hate Crime Murder Suspects' Friend Turns on Them

Today's Post reveals for the first time that there was a third man in the SUV with the Keith Phoenix and Hakim Scott the night of the attack on the late Jose Sucuzhanay and his brother Romel last December in Bushwick. The paper says that the unnamed man did not participate in the attack and is now under police protection since he will testify against his friends. Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes has unsealed the indictments against the two men charged with second-degree murder, manslaughter and assault—all as hate crimes. Hynes said, "The acts which we charge this morning are no less despicable because the victims Jose and Romel Sucuzhañay were not gay.” The DA says that Romel was putting a jacket around his brother on the cold December night when they were spotted by the pair of Bronx men who then allegedly beat Jose with a bottle and a bat. Both Scott and Phoenix are expected to plead not guilty to the crimes that could land them 78 years to life in prison—the maximum sentence. more ›

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