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Police change story on beating
Death not related to Juneteenth crowd.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - About three or four people - not a mob of as many as 20 - beat a man to death after the car he was riding in struck and injured a toddler, police said yesterday.

Police backed off earlier descriptions of Tuesday’s attack, also saying that fewer than two dozen people - rather than hundreds - were witnesses. City officials also said the attack was not connected to the city-sponsored Juneteenth celebration that had just wrapped up nearby, which celebrates the day Texas slaves learned they were freed.

City officials held a news conference to revise their report Wednesday that 2,000 to 3,000 celebrants were in the area when David Rivas Morales, 40, was beaten to death after a car in which he was riding bumped a toddler. The toddler was not seriously hurt.

Assistant City Manager Michael McDonald said almost all the celebrants were blocks away from the public housing complex where the attack occurred. And Assistant Police Chief David Carter said police were wrong on Wednesday when they said as many as 20 people might have participated in the attack.

"We’re looking for three or four heinous criminals," Carter said. "I want to bring them to justice."

Morales’ neighbors and relatives complained on Wednesday about the time it took an ambulance crew to reach him as he lay in the parking lot, choking on his own blood. Morales reached a hospital about 35 minutes after a 911 call was received, timing that became more difficult to understand given the news that there had been no large crowd in the area.

An anonymous 911 caller who reported the beating to a dispatcher struggled to get the dispatcher to understand her location and described the scene as a gang fight involving people celebrating Juneteenth, according to audio files released by the city. Police said yesterday it was not gang-related.

That forced emergency crews to wait a few blocks away until police were sure the area was under control, said Richard Herrington, director of Austin’s Emergency Medical Services Department. Police, however, previously said it took them just one minute to get to the scene.

Herrington also said traffic in the area delayed the ambulance.

"It’s really congested, but the guy’s bleeding from the head pretty bad. If you guys could just mow everybody down to get it through," a police dispatcher told an emergency medical services dispatcher, "we need you in there ASAP."

After the crew was cleared by police to move, it took them seven more minutes to get the rest of the way. Jasper Brown, who commands the communications division for the EMS department, said the street next to the parking lot was extremely congested. Vehicles were parked on both sides of the street, and both lanes were locked in bumper-to-bumper traffic, he said.

Morales was in cardiac arrest when the crew found him, Herrington said. The crew treated him at the scene for about 12 minutes before rushing him to the hospital.

The family also had criticized police for failing to perform CPR before the ambulance arrived, but Herrington said that could have made Morales’ condition worse.

Authorities also released yesterday new details about the events leading up to the beating, saying the car’s driver had just dropped off Morales at his sister’s town house when he hit the 2-year-old child. Three or four men confronted the driver, and Morales came to help him, Carter said.

The driver told police he got away in his vehicle before the beating began and didn’t know his friend had been hurt, Carter said. Police have refused to identify the driver because he is a witness.


Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


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Copyright © 2007 The Columbia Daily Tribune. All Rights Reserved.

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