One man still wanted by police in KKK rally stabbings at Anaheim park - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

One man still wanted by police in KKK rally stabbings at Anaheim park

Share via

Police were asking for the public’s help Monday in finding a man who they believe was involved in a bloody melee with a group of Ku Klux Klan members at an Anaheim park over the weekend, authorities said.

The man is wanted on suspicion of assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury in connection with several stabbings Saturday afternoon at Pearson Park, where counter-protesters confronted a small group of KKK members who showed up for a rally.

The melee ended with more than a dozen arrests and three people stabbed. Five KKK members who were arrested as part of the brawl were released from jail after a video showed they were acting in self-defense, Anaheim police said Sunday.

Advertisement

The four men and one woman had been held on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon after the stabbings of three people who were demonstrating against the white supremacist group, according to a statement from the Anaheim Police Department.

Police released the five after video and other evidence appeared to exonerate them.

“The totality of the evidence, including videos, still pictures and interviews, paints a pretty clear picture as to who the aggressors were,” Anaheim police Sgt. Daron Wyatt said. “It does appear to be self-defense and defense of another.”

A final decision on whether to file charges will be made by Orange County prosecutors.

See more of our top stories on Facebook >>

Seven anti-KKK protesters also were arrested during the brawl in Pearson Park. Several remain in police custody.

Advertisement

More than a dozen people gathered Sunday outside Anaheim police headquarters and carried signs demanding the protesters’ release.

“Some of them are being held on trumped-up charges of elder abuse,” said Debbie Leance, the group’s spokeswoman. a high school teacher from Riverside. “We’re fighting for all charges to be dropped, but we’re not getting answers.”

Police still were looking for at least one assault suspect. They released a photo of a man, asking for the public’s help in identifying him.

Advertisement

A small group of people representing the Klan initially announced that it would hold the Saturday rally in the city where the group was once powerful.

Police expected about 20 people to show up at the rally.

Hours before the protest was to begin, several dozen anti-KKK protesters had arrived to stage a counter-demonstration.

About 12 p.m., several men in black garb with Confederate flag patches arrived in an SUV near the edge of the park. Fighting broke out moments after they got out of the car. Some of the protesters could be seen kicking a man whose shirt read “Grand Dragon.”

At some point, an anti-KKK protester collapsed on the ground bleeding, crying that he had been stabbed.

Two other anti-KKK protesters were also stabbed during the melee — one with a knife and the other with an unidentified weapon, Wyatt said.

The three stabbing victims were hospitalized in stable condition, police said.

Witnesses said the klansmen used the point of a flagpole as a weapon while fighting with protesters.

Advertisement

As he was escorted in handcuffs by police, one klansman told the officer that he “stabbed [a man] in self-defense.”

Anaheim city officials have defended the police’s handling of the melee.

Cautioning that officers had a “tough job” trying to protect everyone, Mayor Tom Tait said that police were conducting an internal review to assess whether the department’s performance could be improved.

Wyatt said the department had a plan in place and that officers quickly responded to the violence.

“We had individuals who specifically came there to commit acts of violence, and there is nothing to do to stop that,” he said of the violent confrontation that was partly captured on video.

Klansmen were once the dominant political force in Anaheim, occupying four of five City Council seats before a recall effort led to their ouster in 1924. A KKK rally once drew 20,000 people to the city.

Among the protesters who were arrested was a 17-year-old, who was unidentified because juveniles’ names are not released.

Advertisement

The others were:

Nicole Rae Schop, 24, of Los Angeles, who was arrested on suspicion of elder abuse, with bail set at $50,000.

Marquis DeShawn Turner, 20, of Anaheim, who was arrested on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon, with bail set at $25,000.

Randy Omar McCauley Felder, 25, of Lakewood, who was arrested on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon, with bail set at $25,000.

Mark Anthony Liddell, 26, of Los Angeles, who was arrested on suspicion of elder abuse, with bail set at $50,000.

Guy Harris, 19, a transient, who was arrested on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon, with bail set at $25,000.

Hugo Contreras, 38, of Hawthorne, who was arrested on suspicion of elder abuse, with bail set at $50,000.

Advertisement

Staff writers Matt Hamilton and James Queally contributed to this report.

Follow @newsterrier, @LAcrimes and @JosephSerna on Twitter.

ALSO

Anaheim is land of Disney, not Ku Klux Klan, dismayed residents say

Violence at Ku Klux Klan rally in Anaheim: Police defend their actions

Mother and son are killed in a drive-by shooting outside a Carson home

Advertisement
Advertisement