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'He will remain a hero': families and friends mourn victims of Portland stabbing

 


Ricky John Best and Taliesin Myrddin Namkai Meche, the two victims of the Portland double murder.

Ricky John Best and Taliesin Myrddin Namkai Meche, the two victims of the Portland double murder. Composite: Twitter/Vajra Alaya-Maitreya

'He will remain a hero': families and friends mourn victims of Portland stabbing

This article is more than 6 years old

Taliesin Myrddin Namkai-Meche, 23, and Rick Best, 53, were killed for intervening during a racist attack on a commuter train


Bonnie Malkin

Sunday 28 May 2017

The families, friends and colleagues of two men murdered while trying to stop a racist attack on two young Muslim girls on a train in Portland have paid tribute to them as heroes.

Taliesin Myrddin Namkai-Meche, 23, and Rick Best, 53, were fatally stabbed after intervening when suspected white supremacist began yelling “hate speech”, police said.

A third man, Micah David-Cole Fletcher, 21, was treated for injuries that police said were not expected to be life-threatening. Jeremy Joseph Christian, 35, was being held in the Multnomah county jail on suspicion of aggravated murder, attempted murder, intimidation and being a felon in possession of a weapon. He was arrested a short time after the attack on Friday.

Asha Deliverance, the mother of Namkai-Meche, confirmed his death in a post on Facebook, in which she wrote that her “dear baby boy passed on yesterday while protecting two young Muslim girls from a racist man on the train”.

“Shining bright star I love you forever.”

Rick Best, a father of four and army veteran, was remembered by colleagues who said “it’s just like Rick to step in and help somebody out”. Speaking to the Orgeonian, his supervisor at the Bureau of Development Services, Kareen Perkins, said “he was always the first person you would go to for help”.

City commissioner Chloe Eudaly, who until recently oversaw the bureau, released a statement, paying tribute to his bravery.

“He stood up for two young women and others he didn’t even know — all because he wanted to help,” she said.

Portland mayor Ted Wheeler said both men “died heroes as a result of a horrific act of racist violence”.

Tributes were posted to them on Twitter.

 


A memorial to the men was set up where the stabbing took place. At the memorial eight-year-old Coco Douglas left a sign and some rocks she had painted with rainbow colours.

Her stepmother, Angel Sauls, said the attack had been particularly hard on their family because Sauls is black and Coco and her father are white.

“I had hoped

that it was Portland, Maine, and not Portland, Oregon,” Sauls said, after choking back tears.

“I’m scared that this is going to make people afraid to stand up for other people … I’m just really sorry that their acts of kindness were repaid in such a horrible way.”

With Associated Press



THE GUARDIAN




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