September 21, 2024
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Portland man fined $500 for threatening Somali man

PORTLAND – A Portland man who launched a racially charged tirade and physically threatened a Somali cabdriver outside a convenience store has been fined $500 and ordered to stay away from the victim, prosecutors said Wednesday.

A Superior Court justice ruled Tuesday after a 1 1/2-day hearing that Garrett Powell’s actions violated the Maine Civil Rights Act.

The incident happened outside a Big Apple convenience store on Dec. 14, 2004, after Powell’s group had been out drinking at his family’s restaurant, Tortilla Flats, and at taverns in the Old Port, said Assistant Attorney General Leanne Robbin.

Powell, 24, became incensed when taxi driver Ali Abdi asked the driver of Powell’s cab to move so he could have access to the air pump, Robbin said.

The situation deteriorated when a companion of Powell’s emerged from the Big Apple, saw the confrontation and pulled out a knife, Robbin said. That man, Charles Frechette, was previously convicted of reckless conduct, she said.

Ali testified that he no longer felt safe in Portland and decided to move away. He’s now a college student in the Boston area, she said.

Attorney General Steven Rowe said his office won’t tolerate threats of violence against minority communities.

“Like many Somalis, this man had come to our country for a better life and to find sanctuary from the violence of Mogadishu. Instead, he was terrorized by local white men because of his ethnicity and race,” Rowe said.


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