Former Ga. U.S. Attorney BJay Pak Focuses On Atlanta AAPI Victims, Potential Hate Crime Charges

Former Georgia U.S. Attorney BJay Pak, shown in 2018, joined WABE’s “All Things Considered” to talk about how Georgia’s new hate crimes law, which was passed amid the Brunswick-area Ahmaud Arbery case, could apply to the case of Robert Aaron Long of Woodstock, Georgia. Long has been charged in a deadly shooting spree Tuesday.

Emilia Brock / WABE

Police are still investigating whether the metro Atlanta spa shootings, in which most of the victims were Asian women, can be considered a hate crime.

But former Georgia U.S. Attorney BJay Pak, who is the first Korean-American to serve in that position, says investigators need to look into all aspects of what motivated the white, 21-year-old Cherokee County man to target three different Atlanta spas primarily owned by the AAPI (Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) community.

Pak spoke with WABE’s “All Things Considered” producer Lily Oppenheimer about how Georgia’s new hate crimes law, which was passed amid the Brunswick-area Ahmaud Arbery case, could apply to the case of Robert Aaron Long of Woodstock, Georgia.