An elderly worker was thrown to the ground and ruthlessly attacked by a teen during an NBA YoungBoy gig as concertgoers watched the disturbing assault unfold in front of them.
Thomas Schlange, 66, was working the rap concert at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City Sunday night when he asked the teen to move because he wasn’t sitting in his assigned seat, Fox 4 News reported.
Fan-record footage shows the teen throw Schlange into a row of seats and unleash a barrage of punches onto the arena worker.
Schlange said he doesn’t remember much from the assault, only the teen’s rage and needing to get away to safety.
“I mean, it is serious; I went down and had blows to my head,” Schlange told Fox 4 News. “He was so enraged, so we were just, in essence, trying to protect the fans.”
The disoriented usher then tried to get to his feet, but the teen stood over him. Schlange raised an arm to defend himself, but the teen repeatedly slapped it aside.
The teen then angrily delivered a series of violent punches to the 66-year-old victim’s head before one good Samaritan stopped the attack.
Police arrested the teen after the violent outburst on Sunday night, but he was later released to his parents while authorities continue to investigate.
The Kansas City Police Department confirmed the teen was under 16, and it’s unclear what charges the juvenile may face.
Schlange was hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries. He had already suffered glaucoma and “one of his eyes may suffer more damage,” his family said on a GoFundMe page created to help with medical costs.
“We are devastated for the injustice of this person and other attendees that didn’t stop that guy at all,” Schlange’s grandson Herber Lopez said.
Schlange said after nearly two decades on the job, he never imagined he would become a victim of such a violent assault at work.
“The message is: we, as young adults or people growing into adulthood, we need to learn how to control our anger,” he said.
Schlange is expected to meet with police on Friday as they continue their investigation.
A spokesperson for the T-Mobile Center, Shani Tate Ross, told the outlet that the attack on the employee was “horrific” and unacceptable.
“This isolated incident does not reflect our venue, our city or the thousands of guests of all ages who enjoyed the show without incident,” Ross said. “Violence of any kind is unacceptable at T-Mobile Center.”
The video of the assault, which has gone viral across social media, has heightened public concern regarding youth violence and event safety.
Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas’s office condemned the violence and asked the public to share any information about violent assaults during the concert with police.
“Concerts, sporting events and community gatherings should be safe places of joy and connection, not fear or harm,” the mayor’s office told Fox 4 News.
“The venue will work with KCPD, our prosecutors and our employees to ensure the assailants are identified and charged for the criminal conduct that occurred Sunday evening.”
Following the violence that broke out at the T-Mobile Center, the United Center in Chicago announced it had canceled an NBA YoungBoy concert set to be held on Wednesday night.
The venue did not provide a specific reason for canceling the show, but no other shows scheduled at the venue have been canceled.
The Baton Rouge-based rapper, currently on his “MASA Tour,” is on his first tour in five years.
Read the full article here