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Possible Hate Attack on Black Woman Roils Louisiana Town

Update: Late Tuesday afternoon, authorities in Louisiana said Sharmeka Moffitt, a 20-year-old African-American woman, set herself on fire in a park in Winnsboro, La., Sunday night and faked what appeared to be a brutal, racially motivated hate crime. The alleged attack rattled the small city of 5,000 residents, dredging up memories of the state鈥檚 racially violent past. Moffitt had told police three men doused her with a flammable liquid and set her ablaze. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a very disturbing case for everyone involved,鈥欌 the Franklin News quoted Winnsboro Police Chief Lester Thomas as saying at a news conference Tuesday. The authorities said that Moffitt鈥檚 fingerprints were on the cigarette lighter and the lighter fluid recovered near the crime scene, adding that a racial slur and the letters KKK that were written in toothpaste on Moffitt鈥檚 car were linked to female DNA. 鈥淚鈥檓 speechless,鈥欌 Winnsboro City Council member Betty Johnson told Hatewatch after hearing the attack was a lie. 鈥淵ou know we will continue to pray for her. She needs a lot of help.鈥欌

The small Louisiana city of Winnsboro was filled with shock, rumors and prayers Tuesday as residents anxiously waited for law enforcement officials to determine who set a 20-year-old African-American woman on fire in a local park Sunday night 鈥 and why.

鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping the police will handle this before it escalates any further,鈥 Betty Johnson, a member of the Winnsboro City Council told Hatewatch Tuesday, adding that 鈥渟ome of the younger people in town鈥 are saying 鈥渟omebody is going to pay for this.鈥

鈥淏ut we don鈥檛 know who did it,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know for sure what happened.鈥

Sharmeka Moffitt was found Sunday around 8 p.m. in Civitan Park with burns over more than 50 percent of her body. Scrawled across her car parked nearby in white letters were KKK and the word 鈥淣-----.鈥

Moffitt reportedly told police that she was attacked by three men wearing white 鈥渉oodies鈥 as she jogged through the popular park. They doused her in a flammable liquid and set her ablaze. But she could not be sure what race her assailants were. There have been no arrests.

Badly burned, Moffitt still managed to call 911 and report the attack. She told officers that she put out the fire herself with water from a nearby spigot before they arrived. She was reportedly undergoing surgery Tuesday at a Shreveport hospital and was listed in critical condition.

鈥淏asically all of Winnsboro is in shock,鈥 Craig Gill, another member of the Winnsboro City Council told Hatewatch. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very nice park, utilized by young and old, black and white. It was a big shock that something like that happened there or anywhere in Winnsboro.鈥

A prayer vigil was scheduled for Tuesday night at the park.

鈥淭he best thing we can do right now is pray for the family and wait for the police,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of confusion and stories going around.鈥

The NAACP is following the investigation closely. On Tuesday, the civil rights organization urged authorities, including the FBI and the Louisiana State Police, to 鈥渇ully investigate鈥 the 鈥済ang attack鈥 on Moffitt.

鈥淚nitial reports of racial animus in the incident are disturbing,鈥 NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous said in a written statement. 鈥淲e will remain vigilant as we urge authorities to conduct a full investigation into this crime.鈥

Winnsboro, located about 40 miles from Monroe, La., has about 5,000 residents and is nearly 60 percent African American.

鈥淲innsboro is one of those very old, rural areas,鈥 Carmen Watkins, the NAACP Louisiana regional director told Hatewatch. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of those funny little Louisiana towns. People have learned a way to survive in the area, but people hold fast to the old traditional ways of thinking, too.鈥

In January, in the town of Jonesboro, about 78 miles from Winnsboro, the NAACP held a rally to protest unfair lending practices and lack of jobs. The Aryan Nations held a counter rally several blocks away, television station KNOE 8 reported. 鈥淥verall both rallies went off without incident,鈥 the station said on its website, 鈥渄espite a number of racial slurs from the Aryan Nation toward a nearby group of African American church members.鈥欌

Jonesboro was also the birthplace of the 1960s-era group Deacons of Defense, a band of African-American military veterans who organized to protect civil rights workers and others across the region from the widespread and brutal violence of the Ku Klux Klan.

But City Council member Johnson, who is black, and her colleague, Gill, who is white, agreed that there has been little racial tension in Winnsboro in recent years. Johnson鈥檚 ex-husband, Jackie, became Winnsboro鈥檚 first black mayor about three years ago.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 ever remember the Klan being active around here,鈥 Betty Johnson said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e all gotten along very well. That鈥檚 what shocks people so much. There hasn鈥檛 been anything that would even remotely make me think something like this could happen. But it did happen.鈥

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