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The UC Santa Barbara police examined two alleged hate crimes on campus

Isla Vista, California-AM late Tuesday evening, UC Santa Barbara presented a warning to a couple on the campus hatred crime on April 28 of this year.

On Monday, April 28, the UC Santa Barbara Police Department received a report on a hate crime outside the student health service student around 5:55 p.m., a timely warning that was issued to the students on Wednesday.

According to the timely warning on Tuesday, the suspect who did not know the victim knew: “Stop from my country!” Before you ask, “Do you have a green card?” And then with a bike in the black beach cruiser to the victim and spat on the face that hit the victim and another nearby person.

The suspect was described as 5,11 “man, about 23 to 27 years old, with blond hair and a beard and wore a dark blue hat, a dark-colored hooded sweatshirt, dark pants and nike shoes as well as a black backpack that shared UC Santa Barbara.

On Tuesday, April 29, around 8:18 p.m., the police from UC Santa Barbara received a separate report on another incident, which was assumed that he was associated with the first report, but previously took place on Monday, explained UC Santa Barbara.

According to the second report, a man with a 5,6 to 5,8 “8” was £ 140-150 and about 35-year-olds with blonde hair with medium length and an unkempt beard with dark jeans and a dark jacket on a bike in front of the Isla Vista Theater and nobody navigated. Country”.

The UC Police Department examines the incidents as a crime, and everyone with information is asked to contact the UC Santa Barbara Police Department under number 805-893-3446, or you can report your information and at the same time remain anonymous.

To report incidesces of harassment or bias, you can also submit a report here and search for both campus and community resources from this list.

“I am sad and alarmed about the hate criminal incidents registered on and near the UCSB campus,” said Supervisor Laura Capps in response to the reports reported. “Discrimination files have no place here and undermine the values ​​of respect, dignity and compassion that we prefer in Santa Barbara County, especially in our schools.

Your news channel has contacted the UC Santa Barbara to get further information, and your answer will be added to this article when he has received.

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