advertisement
"F**king Hindu, sand n*gger."
These were the racial slurs hurled at Rouble Claire, a 66-year-old Sikh man who has been living in California's Sutter County for decades.
In May 2021, Claire was racially abused by a woman at a local grocery store called South Butte Market. The woman, identified as Sarah Hollis, was his neighbour and had falsely accused him of killing her dog with his vehicle, The Sacramento Bee reported Claire as saying.
The horror for Claire, however, had not yet ended.
Later that day, he encountered another racist incident when an individual purportedly connected to the same woman wrote the word "Sand n*gger in chalk on the road outside his house and on his driveway. When he went outside to confront the woman, he was once again called a "n*gger."
After the first incident, Claire immediately went inside the store and asked an employee to call the police. However, they did not respond to the scene.
When he asked them to investigate further, the police refused to reopen the case for several months, until an NGO called 'The Sikh Coalition' got involved.
Under pressure from the NGO, the police finally reopened the investigation after months and recommended charges against the woman involved in the incident. However, the Sutter County District Attorney’s Office refused to bring the charges, citing a nearly six-month delay between the incident and the charges.
Further, Claire's lawyers discovered that Sutter County had not followed state laws with regard to the police's hate crime policy.
"I have been subject to threats, harassment, and racial slurs – yet almost a full year later, no one has been held accountable," Claire had said in a statement in May last year.
In response to the charges, a court finally ruled in late January this year against the two errant police deputies and Sutter County, saying that they had violated the rights of the Sikh man. Claire was also awarded $25,000 plus legal fees.
"This judgment reflects the unavoidable fact that Sutter County’s institutions failed our client," one of Claire's lawyers said. "No one should have to experience hateful words or conduct – nor should they go months without an adequate investigation or have their legitimate concerns belittled and ignored when the safety of them and their family is at risk."
Meanwhile, court records stated that Hollis and Claire had agreed to handle the issue outside the court using the voluntary dispute resolution programme, according to The Sacramento Bee.
After the judgment was passed in his favour, Claire said in a statement on Monday, 30 January:
Meanwhile, the Sikh Coalition has been attempting to get criminal charges brought against the perpetrators in the case – including criminal threats, assault, assault with a deadly weapon, and hate crime.
While the NGO did not legally represent Claire, they urged the Sheriff’s Office and Sutter County’s district attorney to take action on the allegations.
The case comes in the backdrop of an alarming increase in hate crimes in the United States against Sikhs and other Indian Americans.
According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, anti-Sikh hate crimes increased by 140 percent – from 89 to 214 – between 2020 and 2021: the highest ever since the FBI began maintaining a record of such incidents.
(With inputs from The Sacramento Bee.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)