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Man gets five years for Trolley hate crime attack on Syrian refugee

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SAN DIEGO (CNS) - A man who assaulted a 16-year-old Syrian refugee and used a racial epithet during the attack while the two were aboard a San Diego trolley was sentenced today to five years in state prison.

Adrian Vergara, 26, pleaded guilty last month to an assault charge and a hate crime allegation for the Oct. 15 attack, which happened around 3 p.m. when the unidentified victim was traveling home from school.

According to Deputy District Attorney Leonard Trinh, the victim was speaking to a friend on the phone in Arabic, leading Vergara to pull an earbud out of the victim's ear and ask, "What trash are you speaking?''

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When the victim told him he was speaking Arabic, Vergara began shouting anti-Arab and Islamophobic slurs and attacked him. Trinh said the victim was struck five or six times.

Following the assault, which left the victim with minor facial injuries, the assailant got off the trolley at 62nd Street in Encanto, police said. Detectives tracked down video images that "corroborated what the boy reported about the attack,'' according to San Diego Police Department Lt. Shawn Takeuchi.

Vergara was arrested about a week after the attack by Port of San Diego harbor police, initially for a misdemeanor narcotics violation. "During the arrest, Vergara was recognized as being wanted in connection to the SDPD hate crime investigation,'' Takeuchi said.

In a statement issued by the victim shortly after the attack, he claimed his brother had also experienced a hate crime when their family first came to the United States. "We didn't report it when it happened because we didn't think justice was possible,'' the victim wrote.

RELATED: Man pleads guilty to beating Syrian teen refugee on San Diego trolley

"When this attack happened to me on the trolley last week, I decided to file the police report because we can't stay quiet about this.'' The boy said his family "came to this country under the belief that we would have civil rights and liberties and safety. When the attack happened to my brother, we realized that this wasn't true for everyone.''

However, he urged other victims of hate crimes to speak up "to ensure that such incidents don't continue to happen in our community.''

The trolley assault occurred nine days after a man was arrested in Little Italy for allegedly shoving Muslim women in hijabs and telling them to "go back to (their) country.'' The suspect in that case, Kyle Allen, 50, is facing battery charges and a hate crime allegation.