A “Good Samaritan” was beaten to death June 19 while trying to defend a friend from a mob attack in an East Austin housing project. The beating occurred as celebrants were leaving the Juneteenth Festival in nearby Rosewood Park. The slaying was Austin’s 11th homicide this year.
David Rivas Morales died in a parking lot of Booker T. Washington Apartments on the 900 block of Thompson Street, adjacent to the park. Moments earlier, police said the vehicle driven by Morales’s friend had struck an African American boy near the entrance to the apartment complex. The Associated Press identified the child as 2-year-old Michael Hosea, Jr., who was hospitalized with non-life threatening injuries.
“There could have been anywhere from two to 20 attackers,” Austin Police Commander Harold Piatt said of the incident. At the time of the attack, nearly 3,000 people were dispersing the festival, commemorating African American independence in Texas.
When the driver left his car to check on the fallen child, he was confronted by as many as 20 people, Piatt said. When Morales left the vehicle to protect his friend, he was assaulted and beaten. Police said no guns or knives were used. A preliminary autopsy showed Morales died from blunt-force trauma. Police are not releasing the name of the friend, who was not injured. Thus far, police have made no arrests. Witnesses to the beating said one attacker drove away in a maroon or red, four-door Buick ‘Roadmaster’ or Cadillac sedan. Anyone with information is asked to call the police homicide tip line at 512.477.3588.
The sister of the victim, Margaret Morales, rushed to the scene from her nearby residence and found her brother lying on the asphalt, choking on his own blood. Police arrived one minute after receiving a 911 call, although the Morales family complained medical help was slow to arrive. Morales was taken to Brackenridge Hospital 35 minutes after the 911 call was received, said Warren Hassinger, Austin-Travis County Emergency Services spokesman.
At the hospital, the victim’s mother, Mary Helen Morales, said her son’s face was swollen and his eyes were purple. John Morales, the victim's brother, said doctors told him and his family they couldn't control bleeding in the victim’s brain and his heart kept stopping. The Houston Chronicle reported the mother authorized removal of life support after a medical team said her son would not survive.
Margaret Morales said her brother was on his way home from his job as a painter. The driver, whom she knew only as Victor, drove him to and from work every day, she said. Neighbor Earl White said Morales enjoyed sitting on the porch and watching the neighborhood children play in the parking lot.
Another sister, Elizabeth Morales said, "I just want the people caught and brought to justice. I want them to feel the same pain they caused my brother."
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