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Hate-Crime Victim Wants Law Changed

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From Associated Press

With three teenagers arrested for their alleged roles in putting a noose around the neck of a 14-year-old black high school student, the victim said Thursday that parents should share responsibility for hate crimes their children commit.

Dionte Hall and his parents called a news conference to urge prosecution of his attackers and called for legislation to hold parents responsible for instilling prejudice in children that results in violence.

Police say a girl offered Louis J. Giannola $10 to put the noose around Hall’s neck Jan. 14 at a fast-food restaurant north of St. Petersburg. Giannola, 19, also voiced a racial slur, police said.

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Hall said he remained calm, returned to school and discussed the matter with staffers there. His father, Christopher Hall, said he is proud of his son.

“I think I realized how strong he is,” Christopher Hall said. “I can’t tell how I would have reacted.”

Giannola, of Zephyrhills, was released from jail Sunday on $10,000 bond on a felony hate crime charge and another $250 on an unrelated charge.

Two others charged -- the girl accused of offering the money and another teen accused of tying the noose -- were not identified because they are minors.

The teens told police it was a joke.

Hall said in a letter to President Bush that his life since the incident has been “crazy and confusing.”

“I think about what happened, and it reminds me of what happened to the African-American man in Texas, who was dragged ... to his death behind a truck,” he wrote.

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The Hall family’s attorney, Grady C. Irvin Jr., advocated making parents culpable if they instill intolerance in children who go on to commit hate crimes, but didn’t discuss how such a law would be enforced.

Giannola’s mother, Dee Giannola, has said her son probably just made a bad decision.

“We are not a prejudiced family by any means,” she told the St. Petersburg Times.

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