Teen Girls in Videotaped Beating of Woman Are Remorseless, Cop Says
Six teenage girls videotaped the brutal beating and posted it on Facebook.
Sept. 28, 2012 -- Four teenage girls caught on videotape laughingly beating a defenseless woman are remorseless and defiant even as they are about to be arraigned on criminal charges in a Philadelphia court, police said today.
The girls videotaped the beating and posted it on Facebook. Someone who saw the video called the cops.
Four of the six teens involved have been arrested and they are aged 16 and 17, according to the Chester Police Department. Authorities are searching for the other two girls.
The cell phone video shows five girls standing on the street Tuesday night, playing around for the camera before the assault began.
"It's a group of girls on a corner chatting, rapping, goofing around," Chester Police Det. James Nolan told ABCNews.com.. "Then they decide, from the audio, you hear them say they're going to 'f**k this b***h up.' They plot the thing as they walk up."
The teens approach a woman sitting on her doorstep and a girl takes the first punch. They chase her into the house where the woman screams as the girls laugh and beat her with their hands, fists, feet and a chair. The video shows the girls pushing each other out of the way and then delivering a flurry of punches to the defenseless woman.
"It's 90 seconds or so that they beat on her and then they run out," Nolan said, calling the beating "senseless."
Surveillance footage from outside shows the six girls run out of the house and down the street. The victim did not call the police. Police said it "seems to be the case" that the woman suffers from "some diminished capacity," but they do not know the details of her mental capacity.
After the video was reported to police, the 48-year-old victim was interviewed by police and treated for injuries. She sustained treatment for her injuries.
The girls have been charged with simple assault, aggravated assault, reckless endangerment, burglary, harassment, and criminal trespass, Nolan said. The district attorney's office has decided that the girls will be tried as adults and they could face up to 20 years in prison, if convicted.
Enrique Latoison, the attorney for one of the 16-year-old girls, denied that his client was not feeling remorse.
"She's 16, never been in trouble a day in her life. She's in good standing in school," Latoison told ABCNews.com. "She's very upset about the situation."
Latoison visited the girl in jail today and said that she was "very upset and crying" and did not know she had been charged as an adult.
He added that his client was present during the incident, but never made contact with the victim. Latoison said that the teens and the victims knew each other.
Nolan said that the girls are not showing any remorse.
"It was a big party and they're still defiant," Nolan said. "There's no discernible reason for what happened other than fun, sport."
Nolan said that for the community and even for veteran law enforcement officials, the assault has hit a nerve.
"You can see it. Things like this happen, but we usually get the end result," he said. "To actually see it go on, that's what's got everyone's attention. To actually see the crime happen, it's almost like we're all witnesses, which is something we don't often have."
"It's people's greatest fear to be attacked unwarranted," Nolan said. "It's the one fear people have, to be attacked."