I can't believe someone would do this......and so close to home
Toronto man says he and friends attacked while fishing near Kingston
The Canadian Press
Sun 30 Sep 2007
Section: Quebec-Ontario Regional General News
TORONTO _ An east-end man says a trip with some friends to a lucky fishing spot near a bridge in eastern Ontario brought him face to face with a man wielding an axe, screaming at him to ``go home.''
``It was like a tiger attacking a goat,'' Jinxin Wang said.
Wang, 47, had set off on a fishing trip last Friday night with two buddies.
Recent media reports about attacks on Asian fishermen, where they are sometimes thrown over a bridge along with their equipment, did not deter them.
Wang said he was unaware that York Region police had launched a hate-crime investigation last Thursday into four incidents near Lake Simcoe.
For two months, August and September, the crappie are plentiful in the rivers and streams of Ontario.
Fishing aficionados like Wang angle from night till dawn, when these fish bite the most.
Since crappie are available mostly frozen, bringing home a fresh one is a delight.
Wang took his friends to a spot near Westport, about 45 minutes north of Kingston, that yielded at least a dozen crappie two years ago.
They checked to see if there were any No Fishing signs on the bridge.
When a white pickup truck slowed on the bridge and a woman told the group to go away because it was not a fishing site, the party moved under the bridge.
Less than 10 minutes later, they said they heard someone swearing loudly and telling them ``No fishing, go home.''
There were four men and two dogs, he said. They carried axes and baseball bats. Wang said one stepped up to him and swung the axe within a few centimetres of his face.
``If we didn't go, I knew we would be attacked,'' Wang said.
So, without a word, they said they walked to the car while the men made loud chopping noises on the bridge while ``swearing, shouting and yelling'' at them.
While two of his friends wanted to call the police, a terrified Wang refused.
``I did not want to make trouble for myself,'' he said.
(Toronto Star)
Copyright © 2007 The Canadian Press