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Tag: chinatown

  • 11-year-old robbed while walking home from school in Chinatown on Monday: Police

    Philadelphia police are investigating an armed robbery of an 11-year-old boy as he walked home from school in Chinatown on Monday.

    According to police, the armed robbery took place in an alley at the 900 block of Cherry Street at around 3:30 p.m., just after school got out.

    According to a witness who did not want to be identified, she called the police after the boy ran into a hair salon where she was at the time and said he had just been robbed by at least three assailants.

    The thieves got away with around $300 cash and the boy’s phone, the witness said.

    She said she believes the attackers followed the boy as soon as he got out of school for the day.

    “They told him, if you don’t give us your phone, your money, we are going to shoot you,” the good Samaritan told NBC10 in an exclusive interview. “Chinatown here is a community. We look out for each other’s kids. It’s a safe place. It should be a safe place for the kids to be.”

    Philadelphia police confirmed they are investigating the armed robbery, but have not released any information on the suspects.

    Surveillance cameras are all over the area, and police say they are reviewing footage for more information that could lead to an arrest.

    “For that to happen. For him to walk around this way. He came in here and said, ‘I just got robbed,’ and he literally almost broke down,” the witness said. “How could something like that happen, you know? A lot of things come to mind. Kids should be able to be safe walking home from school, as simple as two blocks, or they should be safe in an environment.”

    Shaira Arias and Brendan Brightman

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  • Denver’s historical Chinatown marker disappeared. The community just put it back

    Denver’s historical Chinatown marker disappeared. The community just put it back

    The original historic marker placed at 19th and Lawrence Streets by Colorado Asian Pacific United that’s meant to inform residents and visitors about racial violence perpetrated by Denverites a century ago. Aug. 8, 2023.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    A marker erected to spread awareness about the history of Denver’s Chinatown has been reinstalled after the original went missing in December.

    The marker was first installed at 19th and Lawrence Streets by Colorado Asian Pacific United in August 2023, but it disappeared a few months later. It was recently replaced in the same spot, but AAPI leaders are still raising money to cover the $12,000 cost.

    “When the marker was taken down, it felt very much like a continued erasure of our history,” said Joie Ha, executive director of Colorado Asian Pacific United. “But I think that it also fueled our determination to make sure that our histories don’t go forgotten.”

    The marker is meant to inform the public about racial violence perpetrated against Asian Americans in Denver a century ago.

    In the late 1800s, a vibrant Denver Chinatown stretched from Market to Wazee streets, which is now part of LoDo. On October 31, 1880, a violent mob of 3,000 white residents descended upon the community and destroyed businesses, temples, and homes. One Chinatown resident, a man named Look Young, was lynched. His murderers were never prosecuted.

    It took the City of Denver until 2022 to issue a formal apology to the descendants of Denver’s Chinese immigrants and the state’s existing Chinese community. As part of that effort, led by former Mayor Michael B. Hancock, the city also removed a downtown plaque that critics said was a racist misrepresentation of the Chinatown riot. It was critiqued for celebrating white saviors and failing to name Lee and the other victims of the mob’s violence.

    The original historic marker placed at 19th and Lawrence Streets by Colorado Asian Pacific United, meant to inform residents and visitors about racial violence perpetrated by Denverites a century ago. Aug. 8, 2023.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    But the historical marker – a tall, metal and wood monument bolted to a concrete base – only lasted a few months before it went missing.

    The Denver Police Department never found out what happened to the missing marker. “No arrests have been made,” and the case is “inactive pending new information,” a DPD spokesperson wrote in a text.

    Previously, Ha told Denverite it was unclear what happened to the marker. There was no video evidence documenting its removal. Although CAPU didn’t receive any hateful messages about its disappearance, malicious intent has not been ruled out. Some suspect the marker was hit by a vehicle, but the fact that it was not left on the ground was cause for suspicion. 

    The leftover foundation of a stolen historic marker on Wazee Street, that placed in 2023 by Colorado Asian Pacific United to inform residents and visitors about racial violence perpetrated by Denverites a century ago. Feb. 14, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Although a new marker has already been installed, CAPU has yet to raise the remaining $2,000 needed to cover the $12,000 total necessary for its replacement. 

    “It was mostly smaller donations that helped us get there,” Ha said of the fundraising so far, as well as a larger donation from the Denver Asian American Pacific Islander Commission. 

    Ha said a community leader recently offered to provide a thousand-dollar matching donation if CAPU is able to raise the other $1,000 needed to meet its goal.

    The new marker is nearly identical to its predecessor, with a few small adjustments. 

    “There are some changes that we made to make sure that it’s even more sturdy, although it was incredibly sturdy before,” Ha said. “It’s not something that you could have ripped out without a vehicle. But we did try to reinforce it further.” She said CAPU also enlarged the text on the new model to make it more legible.

    There will be an official unveiling for the new marker in October – date and time to be announced. 

    “We want an opportunity for the community to get together and celebrate the fact that we were able to get it reinstalled and to see it and be in community,” Ha said.

    Ha said event details will be announced on CAPU’s Instagram and Facebook. She also encouraged people who are interested in learning more about the history of Denver’s Chinatown to visit History Colorado’s upcoming exhibit, Where is Denver’s Chinatown? Stories Remembered, Reclaimed, Reimagined. It will be on display from Oct. 9, 2024, through Aug. 9, 2025.

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  • New details released in $100K jewelry store robbery in Chinatown

    New details released in $100K jewelry store robbery in Chinatown

    Police officials released Tuesday after $100,000 in jewelry was stolen in an afternoon heist that happened in Philadelphia’s Chinatown community on Wednesday, July 31, 2024.

    Officials have announced an arrest in this case previously.

    According to law enforcement officials, Phu Chim, 53, has been arrested and charged after a SWAT team executed a search warrant of a property on the 1600 block of South 28th Street, on Aug. 3, 2024.

    Law enforcement officials said the theft happened at about 3 p.m. on Wednesday, July 31, 2024, when a man — now believed to be Chim — walked into a jewelry store along the 900 block of Arch Street, produced a firearm and approached a case containing 24-carat jewelry.

    Chim, police claim, then pulled out an object believed to be a hammer from a bad he was carrying and smashed a glass case before grabbing four trays full of jewelry.

    Police believe the value of the stolen jewelry was worth more than $100,000.

    He then fled on foot and, police said, investigation helped identify him as a suspect leading up to his arrest on Aug. 3, 2024.

    At the time of his arrest, police officials said, Chim was also allegedly in possession of loaded firearms, ammunition and narcotics.

    Chim has been charged with robbery at gun point, weapons violations, narcotics possession and related offenses.

    Hayden Mitman

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  • Chinatown coalition touts study that warns new 76ers arena could drive away neighborhoods’ businesses

    Chinatown coalition touts study that warns new 76ers arena could drive away neighborhoods’ businesses

    Opponents of the 76ers’ proposed arena in Center City released an analysis Thursday claiming to show the project could cost the city a billion dollars in tax revenue over the next several decades by destabilizing businesses in nearby neighborhoods.

    The analysis, shared by Chinatown organizers, aims to refute brighter economic projections touted by the team in its quest to gain city approval for the project on East Market Street. The 76ers called the new study “fatally flawed” and questioned the methods used by its author, who fears the city’s commissioned impact studies on the arena — which have yet to be released — will fail to capture any potential downsides of the team’s plan.

    “The idea behind this project was to try to look beyond the direct impact of the arena and try to model what might happen to the existing businesses and employees in the area,” said Arthur Acolin, the University of Washington researcher who conducted the analysis.

    The study looks at potential impacts on businesses in the 19107 ZIP code, which covers the commercial core of Chinatown, Washington Square West and Midtown Village within a mile of the proposed arena site at the Fashion District mall. The businesses in this footprint generate an estimated $296 million in city and state tax revenue each year, according to Acolin’s analysis.

    Acolin presents three hypothetical scenarios — low, median and high impact — with calculations of potential business closures and tax revenue losses during the five-year period of the arena’s construction and the first 30 years of operation.

    The economic rationale for the study is that disruptions during the construction phase will harm area businesses — some of which operate on slim margins — by discouraging people from shopping in the area, according to Acolin. And when the arena is completed, crowds for Sixers games and other events will most often spend their money on concessions and at new businesses built to complement the arena. Over time, this could threaten the survival of existing businesses to varying degrees, past research on other development projects shows. 

    Acolin completed his graduate studies in urban planning at the University of Pennsylvania and said he has remained invested in Philadelphia’s economic future. He’s been a community representative in the city’s ongoing review of the 76ers’ arena plan and previously has attended planning meetings for the Save Chinatown Coalition, but said he was not paid for his research.

    In his worst-case scenario, Acolin projects there could be a loss of more than 500 businesses and 15,000 jobs in the 19107 ZIP code. That could result in as much as $1.04 billion in lost city and state tax revenue, a figure that would offset much of the $1.472 billion in tax revenue the 76ers have claimed the arena will generate in its first 30 years for the city and state.

    “The new businesses entering bring new customers, but also drain some of the customers from the area,” Acolin said. “It’s really a substitution effect that in the Sixers’ numbers is not taken into account at all. They’re just looking at what their investment will be contributing in terms of economic activity, but not what they are taking away from the community.”

    The 76ers called Acolin’s conclusions “haphazard,” suggesting it has “half-baked theories,” errors and omissions.

    “The underlying research and citations do not actually reach the stated conclusions,” said Mark Nicastre, a spokesperson for the 76ers on the arena. “There is no explanation of how the researcher arrived at his data, assumptions, or conclusions. If it exists, we encourage the author to submit it to the city for independent analysis as we have done.”

    In the 76ers’ campaign to build their arena and residential tower, the team has committed to privately financing the $1.55 billion project. State subsidies haven’t been ruled out, but the 76ers’ proposal is otherwise an unusual example of a sports venue that ostensibly would not be dependent on significant public money — apart from a negotiated tax payment, called a PILOT agreement, that the 76ers would get on the land they lease from the city.

    The project’s financing is among the reasons the Sixers are so optimistic about their tax revenue projections related to the arena, which they say will create 1,000 permanent jobs and crucially fill the impending void of created by the Fashion District mall’s decline.

    Acolin and the Chinatown organizers contend that the 76ers and the city have not examined any of the potential negative impacts of an arena on small and mid-size businesses in the area. They say there has been too little transparency around the methods behind the impact studies done by the 76ers’ consultants and by the firms chosen to lead the city’s arena impact studies, which are paid for by the team and overseen by the Philadelphia Industrial Development Corp.

    “It is hard to tell given the lack of details, but from what I have seen, they do not claim to model changes in surrounding activity as part of their tax estimates,” Acolin said. “If they do, they should make it clear and break down how much is coming from (the arena’s) economic activity and how much is coming from what they anticipate to be the impact on existing businesses.” 

    PIDC did not respond Thursday to a request for information about when the city’s impact studies will be released and whether they will have data that answer questions similar to Acolin’s research. A spokesperson for City Councilmember Mark Squilla, whose 1st District covers the arena site, said Thursday that community members participated in shaping the goals of the impact studies and that Squilla’s office defers PIDC about their specifics. 

    Chinatown organizers said they expressed concerns to Squilla and others last year, but were never assured that their requests would been taken into account.

    “Despite multiple requests to fill that gap (made to PIDC, city planning, and Squilla) the scope of work has not been modified to include an analysis of potential lost revenue, to our knowledge,” Save Chinatown Coalition spokesperson Melissa McCleery said.

    As the wait continues for the city to release its studies, the 76ers warn that the precarious future of the Fashion District makes the arena’s approval a pressing issue for local leaders. The team believes it holds the best path forward for the languishing East Market Street corridor and has presented a rare opportunity for the city to leverage private investment in a bold, multifaceted project. In emails Thursday, team officials questioned why building the arena would be considered more harmful than letting the mall die with no plan to replace it, or opting for a different project that theoretically could affect other businesses in ways similar to those described in Acolin’s analysis.

    “This should be read for what it is — another attempt by those who oppose the project to obfuscate the truth by pumping out misinformation,” Nicastre said.

    Given the lack of direct highway access near the proposed arena site and the lofty expectation that fans will embrace public transportation, Acolin argues that the viability of the arena “seems highly speculative.” He feels the city would be better served if the 76ers built a new arena at the Sports Complex in South Philadelphia, where the project could better support and connect to neighboring projects in the Navy Yard and the development of the Bellwether District. He acknowledged that the challenges on East Market Street are significant, especially in the context of broader economic conditions constraining new development, but he urged careful deliberation about whether an arena is the right answer. 

    “One of the big issues is the pressure to act now and find a solution for that location now while the development cycle is really not favorable to any large-scale development,” Acolin said. “The arena can seem like an immediate fix, but then there is the potential that it does not support the existing businesses and residents.”

    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • Store manager facilitated string of 7 robberies at same DC Walgreens, police say – WTOP News

    Store manager facilitated string of 7 robberies at same DC Walgreens, police say – WTOP News

    The same person committed seven armed robberies at the same Walgreens, according to D.C. police. Officials are also saying the suspect had help from inside the store.

    D.C. Chief of Police Pamela Smith and others walk past the Chinatown Walgreens, the site of at least seven armed robberies between July and February.(WTOP/Mike Murillo)

    The Walgreens in D.C.’s Chinatown neighborhood has been robbed at gunpoint seven times since July of last year. Police said the same person committed each of the armed robberies, and are now announcing he had help from inside the store.

    Michael Robinson, 33, of Capitol Heights, Maryland, worked as a manager at the Walgreens during the string of robberies and has been charged with conspiracy to interfere with interstate commerce by robbery. His nephew, 26-year-old D.C. resident Gianni Robinson, faces the same charge.

    At a press conference Tuesday, D.C. Police Chief Pamela Smith said the conspiracy case “invoked fear in the community.”

    According to D.C. police and the FBI, 24-year-old D.C. resident Kamanye Williams entered the store at least seven times between July and February, taking money from the safe in the manager’s office at gunpoint each time.

    Since July, Chief Smith said police have been working with the FBI on the robberies that targeted the store.

    Police said during the most recent robbery on Sunday Williams was shot by a special police officer. Williams was critically injured and remains in a local hospital at this time.

    In at least one instance, the robber is captured on surveillance video looking at a phone while punching in the code to the locked manager’s office. In that same robbery, police said Michael Robinson served as Williams’ driver beforehand and afterward.

    During several other robberies, Michael Robinson was working as the on-duty manager.

    Gianni Robinson was connected to the robberies through cellphone location data, according to charging documents. Investigators said he was traveling with the robbery suspect immediately before and after certain robberies.

    Police also said Gianni Robinson was dating a different manager of the Walgreens, who, during one of the robberies, emptied around $3,000 into the robber’s backpack while being held at gunpoint along with a special police officer. Authorities have not announced charges against that store manager.

    Williams faces armed robbery, assault with a dangerous weapon, kidnapping and other charges when he’s out of the hospital.

    WTOP’s Mike Murillo contributed to this report.

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    Thomas Robertson

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  • Montreal filmmaker documents race to save vanishing Chinatowns across North America  | Globalnews.ca

    Montreal filmmaker documents race to save vanishing Chinatowns across North America | Globalnews.ca

    Chinatowns across North America don’t just share a similar look — they also face similar existential threats and David-versus-Goliath-like battles for survival.

    Whether it’s residents of New York City’s Chinatown protesting a proposed mega jail in their community, or Montreal’s Chinese diaspora fighting to save heritage buildings or struggling to keep family restaurants alive during COVID-19, these common threads are a recurring motif of Karen Cho’s documentary “Big Fight in Little Chinatown.”

    Cho, a fifth-generation Chinese Canadian with roots in the Chinatowns of Montreal and Vancouver, documents how these urban pockets of Chinese culture across North America are facing similar pressures from gentrification. In an interview, Cho said the neighbourhoods are prime targets for redevelopment due to their age and proximity to downtown, but also to what she calls “the intersection of racism and urban planning.”

    Urban renewal projects, she said, are disproportionately located in racialized or immigrant communities.

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    “Again and again and again, wherever the Chinatown would be, these are neighbourhoods where freeways are driven through them, light rails and stadiums dropped onto them, prisons put into them,” she said in a phone interview.

    “(These are) the priorities or the choices that the city makes of who gets to stay and who gets displaced.”

    Cho’s hometown of Montreal is a focal point of the documentary, which she said wasn’t part of her original plan. She had long been concerned about the luxury condo towers sprouting up around Montreal’s Chinatown gates, but her initial conception was to focus on the bigger Chinatowns on the continent, in places like Vancouver and New York.


    Click to play video: 'Film documents fight to save Chinatowns'


    Film documents fight to save Chinatowns


    That changed in 2021, when news broke that a developer purchased buildings on one of the most historic blocks of Montreal’s Chinatown — including the Wings building, named for a noodle factory that has long operated there.

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    “The Wings noodle building got bought, and I had a really tough time,” she said. “I couldn’t reconcile this idea that I was gonna film the erasure of my own Chinatown.”

    Cho was a member of the Montreal Chinatown working group, formed in response to development pressures. In early 2022, the activists won a significant battle when the province signed an official notice to grant heritage status to the “institutional core” of Chinatown as well as to two of its best-known buildings, including the Wings factory. That status protects buildings from being demolished or significantly altered without permission.

    She said the move was a good first step in protecting what’s left of Montreal’s Chinatown, which she said was “one condo project away” from complete erasure after decades of urban redevelopment projects that had already led to the demolition of every building where her family had ever lived or worked.

    However, Cho’s film makes it clear that saving Chinatowns is about more than preserving buildings or their facades.

    Much of her documentary shows the day-to-day lives of Chinatown residents in places like Montreal, Vancouver and New York: business owners preparing food to sell, young people rehearsing a dragon dance, seniors gathering in parks. She said she wanted to show that Chinatowns are not just places selling souvenirs and dim sum to tourists, but also providing important community spaces, activities and culture for the people who live there.

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    Click to play video: 'Vancouver Chinatown condo project debate'


    Vancouver Chinatown condo project debate


    Equally important, she said, was to break the “tourist facade” and tell the story from the residents’ point of view. “I follow a lot of intergenerational businesses, people that have been there for a long time, but instead of us as tourists looking through the shop window, it’s like they’re actually looking from the inside out to see the changes in their neighbourhood.”

    Cho’s film tour has taken her across North America, with stops in Montreal, Vancouver, Winnipeg and Los Angeles. Stops include a showing at the Edmonton Chinatown Multi-Cultural Centre on Sunday and at Hot Docs cinema in Toronto on May 30. The documentary is also scheduled for broadcast on TVO and Radio-Canada.

    She said most of her screenings take place in Chinatowns, where she’s had the opportunity to speak with community leaders about their efforts to preserve their districts. The response, she said, has left her hopeful.

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    “There is a 150-year tradition of resistance in those neighbourhoods, and I saw that firsthand,” she said. Seeing those “pockets of resistance” has reminded her of the strength within those communities, despite the odds stacked against them.

    “Chinatown really is like this kind of blade of grass that grows in the cement,” she said. “You know, it’s not supposed to be there, but it’s thriving.”

    &copy 2023 The Canadian Press

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  • 2 Chinese-Americans arrested for allegedly running secret police station in New York City

    2 Chinese-Americans arrested for allegedly running secret police station in New York City

    2 Chinese-Americans arrested for allegedly running secret police station in New York City – CBS News


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    Two Chinese-Americans have been arrested for allegedly running a scheme to intimidate critics of the Chinese government. The scheme included an alleged secret police station run by the Chinese government in a building in New York City’s Chinatown. Jeff Pegues has the details.

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  • Mass shooting in Monterey Park, California, leaves a large Asian-American community on edge

    Mass shooting in Monterey Park, California, leaves a large Asian-American community on edge

    Mass shooting in Monterey Park, California, leaves a large Asian-American community on edge – CBS News


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    Monterey Park, California, has been dubbed “the nation’s first suburban Chinatown.” Now a mass shooting in the midst of a joyful, hopeful Lunar New Year festival has left the large Asian-American community on edge. Adam Yamaguchi reports.

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  • Too Close To Home

    Too Close To Home

    It’s one of the most famous scenes in cinema history. Private Detective, Jake Gittes, is attempting to force the truth out of his lovely but damaged client, Evelyn Mulwray. Just who is the mysterious teenager everyone’s searching for?


    Evelyn: She’s my daughter.
    [Gittes slaps Evelyn]

    Gittes: I said I want the truth!

    Evelyn: She’s my sister. . . .
    [slap]

    Evelyn: She’s my daughter. . . .
    [slap]

    Evelyn: My sister, my daughter.
    [More slaps]

    Gittes: I said I want the truth!

    [Jake throws Evelyn across the room]

    Evelyn: She’s my sister and my daughter!



    The film is Chinatown, a classic neo-noir widely regarded as one of the greatest films of the 1970s. A famously troubled production, screenwriter Robert Towne, director Roman Polanski, and producer Robert Evans eventually saved the film. It’s a brilliantly constructed mystery involving personal and political treachery in 1930s Los Angeles. Jack Nicholson’s performance as Jake Gittes ranks among his best.

    Turns out, Gittes wasn’t the only one to discover a staggering revelation about family secrets and lies, and paternity. Just before the film’s release – in June 1974 – Nicholson received a shocking bit of news that uncannily reflected the iconic scene between Gittes and Evelyn Mulwray. Researchers for a Time magazine story discovered that the woman Nicholson thought was his sister was actually his mother. And the woman he’d thought was his mother was, in truth, his grandmother.

    Nicholson was stunned. By that time, both women were dead, but his brother-in-law reluctantly confirmed the truth of the situation. Already a star, Nicholson asked Time to keep his family secret just that – a secret. But who can keep a juicy secret like this?

    The devilish actor with the wolfish grin ultimately came to grips with the matter. “I’d say it was a pretty dramatic event, but it wasn’t what I’d call traumatizing. After all, by the time I found out who my mother was, I was pretty well psychologically formed. As a matter of fact, it made quite a few things clearer to me. If anything, I felt grateful.”

    Chinatown remains a vivid and engrossing examination of crime, power, and corruption in the City of Angels. But sometimes the greatest mysteries are the ones closest to home.

    Just ask Jack.

    Jai Phillips

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