Muslim Beats and Drags the Mother of His Kids Behind a Car in the U.S.
In what the media is calling a domestic dispute caught on tape, a Muslim man beat, then drug the mother of his children with a car, while their two kids were inside the vehicle .
This was no lovers’ spat. It was the beginning of a disagreement that erupted into a full blown attack on a mother and her two children. (ABC7)
In the United States, a woman got into an argument with the father of her children. The woman pulled over and told the man to get out. When he wouldn’t get out of the car, she did. That’s when the entire situation took a turn for the worst.
With a 2-year-old and 3-year-old in the back seat, police say 34-year-old Hassan Sayed forced his way into the driver’s seat, but not before chasing the woman into the street, taking her purse, pushing and hitting her.Police say he overpowered the mother of his children, and with the kids in the back seat, drove away at a high rate of speed dragging the mother caught in the door. (ABC7)
The entire incident was caught on video camera outside a store in Dearborn, Michigan.
“She was still attempting to get him out of the car when he took off with her hanging on to the side of the vehicle,” says Dearborn Police Detective Patricia Penman. (ABC7)
Hassan Sayed is now looking at several years behind bars. He is a habitual offender , who has been in trouble with the law before. He is now facing charges of stealing the woman’s purse, kidnapping, negligence, child abuse, assault with a deadly weapon, stealing the woman’s cell phone, and endangering a child. The weapon in the assault charge is the car.
The mother managed to escape with non-life threatening injuries.
Making matters worse, this is national domestic violence awareness month.
The US Department of Justice states that 25 percent of women will become victims of domestic violence. That’s almost a million women battered annually.
The ABC station gave the national hotline for anyone in a crisis of domestic abuse.
For help with domestic abuse, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE (7233). (ABC7)
No one should feel they have to take this kind of abuse from any loved one, regardless of his or her personal belief system.
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