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2 teens hit with hate crime charges for allegedly burning Donald Trump sign

The teens have been released on $20,000 bond.

 

Andrew Wyrich

Tech

Posted on Apr 20, 2017   Updated on May 24, 2021, 4:59 pm CDT

Two Baltimore-area teenagers have been charged with arson and committing a hate crime after they allegedly lit a “Make America Great Again” campaign sign on fire late last week.

D’Asia R. Perry and Joy M. Shuford, both 19, were arrested in connection to the incident, Maryland state fire officials said in a statement. The teens “intentionally set the billboard on fire due to political differences with the billboard postings,” according to the office of Maryland’s Fire Marshal.

By allegedly burning the sign “with discrimination or malice toward a particular group, or someone’s belief,” officials felt charging them with a hate crime was warranted, the Baltimore Sun reported.

The sign is located in a shopping center in Princess Anne, Maryland, and the son of the sign’s owner, Jamie Wink, said it had been up since September, the Sun reported. Wink helps run the family’s store, which sells firearms and hunting supplies, in the shopping center.

“It’s a pretty good attention-getter,” Wink told the newspaper, adding that many people stop to take selfies with it.

The sign is an enlarged version of the “Make America Great Again” logo President Donald Trump has used since beginning his campaign for president. It is affixed above a sign in support of Kathy Szeliga, a Republican state senator who has served in the House of Delegates since 2011.

Szekiga also ran for U.S. Senate last year and lost.

A photo of the aftermath of the fire shows a burn mark on the bottom left of Szekiga’s sign. The Trump sign does not appear to be severely damaged. The fire spread to nearby vegetation, officials said.

Szeliga commented on the incident on her Facebook page, saying, “destroying property is not peaceful protest.”

https://www.facebook.com/kathy.szeliga/posts/1493141750748650

Fire officials estimated the fire caused $800 in damage.

Perry was found on the campus of the University of Maryland Eastern Shore and taken into custody after being identified as a driver of a car involved in the incident using video surveillance. Shuford turned herself in on Saturday, according to fire officials.

Both women were released on a $20,000 bond, according to the report.

Update 4:45 pm CT, April 20: Somerset County District Court tell the Daily Dot that authorities have dropped the arson and hate crime charges against Perry and Shuford. Other charges, including malicious burning, destruction of property, and trespassing, remain.

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*First Published: Apr 20, 2017, 9:18 am CDT