Rallying at Hing Hay Park and marching throughout the Chinatown-International District, dozens came together Saturday to stop hate targeted towards Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. “Our community can change America and can end Asian hate,” said one speaker at the event. Also in attendance were the two sisters of John Huynh, a 29-year-old man murdered in Bothell last month outside of an apartment building.
They are numbers for which any social media manager would die, and they re also the underpinning for a process which Davie Fogarty, the founder of the company behind The Oodie, Pupnaps, and five other e-commerce brands, believes can propel his company - Davie Group - on to the ASX within the next year. Mr Fogarty has a few failed tilts at business success under his belt. A Vietnamese roll shop, selling singlets and seasonings on the web - but along the way, crucially, he taught himself how to market and sell online. I ve always been into digital marketing and content creation. I learned all of the skills that were required to launch an e-commerce business, he said.
Family calls for hate crime charges in fatal attack on Bothell man Jonathan Choe | KOMO News UP NEXT
John Huynh’s sisters are still looking for answers and met with prosecutors Thursday, but say they remain frustrated by the pace of this investigation.
“We just wanted to know the truth. We don’t want it swept under the rug. Because if John’s name or story is not out there. Maybe they won’t push for a harder sentence,” says Binh Huynh.
It’s one of those situations right now where Ian Patrick Williams has already been charged for Huynh’s murder. But Huynh’s family wants to make sure he stays behind bars even longer.