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A native aerial person who was convicted for hatred crime against a white person should be again satisfied, a US appeal court ruled on Thursday, potentially leading to additional years in jail.
Kaulana Alo-Kaonohi was sentenced in 2023 by a Honolulu judge in 2023 after six and a half years when a jury was found guilty by a jury and another original aerial man, Levi Aki Junior,.
The jury found the pair inspired by the race when they punched, Lat Mari and Maui, in 2014, used a shovel to defeat Christopher Kunjelman for attempts to go to their remote villages.
Alo-Kaonohi appealed for the sentence, and the prosecutors challenged the judge’s decision that hatred crime growth could not be applied to the punishment.
Air men sentenced for racially inspired attack against a white person
A native aerial person who was convicted for hatred crime against a white person should be satisfied again by an American appeal court. (AP)
The 9th US Circuit Court of appeal panel also ruled on Thursday to confirm Alo-Kaonohi’s sentence.
It was not clear how long the need for alo-keonohi to spend behind bars.
The AKI’s appeal, with the cross-appeal of the AKI sentence of nearly four years of prosecutors, was voluntarily rejected, showing court records.
Kunjelman’s wife, Lori Kunjelman, on Thursday told the Associated Press that he was happy that the prosecutors pushed for a long sentence.
Kunjelman bought a dilapidated, Oceanfront House as he wanted to leave Arizona after the diagnosis of Lori Kunjelman’s multiple sclerosis.
He said, “We had discharged the year -Dardar Maura -Pyaar Kiya, Pyaar Kiya, Mau Pyaar Kaya,” she said, seeing that she saw the house as an affordable opportunity that her husband could fix.
Kaulana Alo-Kaonohi was sentenced to six and a half years in 2023 by a Honolulu judge in 2023 when a jury found him and another person guilty. (Getty image)
She said that her husband’s heartbeat destroyed her marriage, explaining that her husband suffered from brain injuries, causing him to go through divorce.
Christopher Kunjelman was traveling to Europe and was unavailable to address the ruling.
The pair still owns the property, but they do not know what to do with it, Lori Kunjelman said.
“The families there will not allow anyone to set foot on that property,” he said. “There is a lot of enmity.”
The use of the word, “hall,” an aerial word which means that foreign and white individuals, were central for the case. Dennis Kunjelman testified that the men called him a “hall” in a derogatory manner.
2 Native Hi men are sentenced for hatred crime after brutally beating a white person.
The 9th US Circuit Court of Appellates panel on Thursday ruled to confirm the sentence of Kaulana Alo-Kunohi. (Getty image)
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Alo-Kaonohi and Aki’s Attorney said that it was the entitled and derogatory attitude of Christopher Kunjelman who bothers him, not their race.
According to the group’s co-director, Kenneth Lawson, the air innocent project plans to raise the case. The organization wants to argue that an ineffective defense did not present the jury to show the history of the word “hall” in Hawaii that this is not an abusive word.
“I don’t believe it’s a hate crime,” said Lawson.
Lawson also said that defense should be called as witnesses to White, non-Havian residents to testify to live in a village without any racial issues.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.