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Surveillance images show suspect wanted for setting homeless man on fire

Surveillance images show suspect wanted for setting homeless man on fire Surveillance images show suspect wanted for setting homeless man on fire By Allyson Blair | May 13, 2021 at 4:52 PM HST - Updated May 13 at 6:55 PM HONOLULU, Hawaii (HawaiiNewsNow) - New surveillance images show the person suspected of setting a homeless man on fire in Downtown Honolulu in a horrific attack that left the victim critically injured. So far, police have made no arrests in the case. The pictures show the victim had been attacked twice in the span of just a few hours. The first time, the suspect wore a blue bandanna, black sleeves over his arms and in his left hand held what HPD sources say is a Molotov cocktail.

Unsheltered in Honolulu 2020: Edward R Murrow Award For Top News Series

3:00 Organizations call on Honolulu to end homeless sweeps - Aug. 21, 2020 Credit Noe Tanigawa In March 2020, the Honolulu Police Department and the city suspended homeless disruptions, but they resumed in May after HPD’s Provisional Outdoor Screening and Triage Center opened with a capacity of 200. ACLU Executive Director Joshua Wisch contended that with community spread and COVID outbreaks at Oahu Community Correctional Center and homeless shelters, dispersing unsheltered people endangered the public. Find this segment on The Conversation.  Listen

What Are We Doing to Fix Hawai i s Homeless Crisis?

What Are We Doing to Fix Hawai‘i’s Homeless Crisis? The Aloha State now has the highest number of homeless per capita in the nation. What are we doing to help the individuals and families living on the streets? April 22, 2015   In January, homeless service providers counted more than 400 people living in this encampment in Kaka‘ako, near the Children’s Discovery Center. Photo: Odeelo Dayondon     April Fuiava was working at the front desk of a Waikīkī Hotel, her husband was a day laborer and the two were making tough calls just about every day. With seven kids, money was always tight. After the rent was paid $2,000 for an apartment in ‘Ālewa Heights there wasn’t much for anything else. Buy groceries or keep the lights on. Pay the vehicle registration or fill up the cars with gas. “Some days, we wouldn’t have food,” Fuiava says. But even though things were bad, things were never that bad, and the 36-year-old never imagined she’d end up where she did h

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