An
Iraq war veteran whose bravery inspired two statues says he was beaten
by a group of teens in Washington, DC on Friday night after they
approached and asked him whether 'black lives matter'.
Chris Marquez, a decorated US marine, was eating in a McDonald's when the youths walked up and started questioning him, WJLA reported.
'I felt threatened and thought they were trying to intimidate me, so I figured I'm just going to keep to my food, eat my food and hopefully they'll leave me alone,' Marquez told the station.
But he says the youths started calling him a racist, and that when he left they jumped him, beat him up, and robbed him.
'As soon as I walked out of the McDonald’s I got hit in the back of the head, or the side of the head,' he told WJLA. 'I just dropped to the ground, and [the McDonald's manager] says I looked unconscious.'
Marquez served eight years on active
duty in the marines as a rifleman and scout sniper from 2003-2011, and
was awarded a Bronze Star for valor after carrying his commander's body
out of combat, according to The Daily Caller.
But he was best known
for a photograph showing him and a fellow marine carrying a wounded
sergeant out of a house in Fallujah, after a firefight that became known
as 'Hell House.'
That photograph in turn inspired two
statues named No Man Left Behind, which are currently on display at Camp
Pendleton in San Diego and Camp Lejeune in North Carolina.
Police told The NY Daily News today
that they were reviewing the McDonald's location's surveillance footage,
but had yet to make any arrests.
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