Nukedog wrote:
This is fine
Nice try.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017_Chic ... e_incident
As of 12 November 2017, the four suspects' charges were reported by the Cook County Sheriff's Office not to be hate crimes but aggravated kidnapping and ransom instead.
The story is even worse than I thought, though. I hope they fry those fucking psychos.
On December 31, 2016, the 18-year-old victim was dropped off at a McDonald's in suburban Streamwood, Illinois, by his parents. The victim knew one of the suspects before the incident had occurred as the two had attended the same school in Aurora, Illinois, and the victim had mistakenly thought that the two were friends. When the victim went to the McDonald's, he had the intention of spending time with this "friend". On January 2, 2017, the victim's parents filed a report that he was missing.[1]
Police noted that one of the male suspects stole a van and, pretending that it was his own van, went to meet the victim. The victim got into the van with the suspect, and they went to one of the suspect's friend's houses on the West Side of Chicago for a two-day visit. During that time, the victim slept in the van.[1] On January 3, they went to the residence of two of the other suspects, who were sisters. While at the sisters' apartment, the victim and the male suspect "play-fought", which ended in the sisters getting angry and tying the victim up.[1]
The younger of the two sisters then turned on a Facebook Live stream to record the following events. The victim was bound, gagged, beaten, taunted, had part of his scalp removed with a knife, and was forced to kiss the floor and drink from a toilet bowl.[2][3] The attackers are heard shouting "Fuck Trump" and "Fuck white people" in the video.[3][4] One of the suspects contacted the victim's mother and demanded a $300 ransom for the victim's return.[5] Although the Facebook Live stream only lasted 28 minutes, the victim was tied up for hours. Police suspected that the attack stopped when neighbors in a downstairs apartment complained about noise levels.[1]