A
victim of one of Mark Wahlberg's racially motivated attacks as a teenage
delinquent in segregated Boston in the 1980s insists he shouldn't be granted a
pardon for his crimes.
Kristyn
Atwood was among a group of mostly black fourth-grade students on a field trip
to the beach in 1986 when Wahlberg and his white friends began hurling rocks
and shouting racial epithets as they chased them down the street.
"I
don't think he should get a pardon," Atwood, now 38 and living in Decatur,
Georgia, said in an interview with The Associated Press.
"I
don't really care who he is. It doesn't make him any exception. If you're a
racist, you're always going to be a racist. And for him to want to erase it I
just think it's wrong," she said.
Mary
Belmonte, the white teacher who brought the students to the neighborhood beach
that day, sees things differently. "I believe in forgiveness," she
said. "He was just a young kid — a punk — in the mean streets of Boston.
He didn't do it specifically because he was a bad kid. He was just a follower
doing what the other kids were doing."
The
43-year-old former rapper, Calvin Klein model and "Boogie Nights"
actor wants official forgiveness for a separate, more severe attack in 1988, in
which he assaulted two Vietnamese men while trying to steal beer. That attack
sent one of the men to the hospital and landed Wahlberg in prison.
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