Capt. William Plenty of the Lawnside Police Force told the crowd that local and county police, along with the Camden County Prosecutor’s Office and the state Attorney General’s Office, are investigating the case and are seeking to ensure Hines and all Lawnside residents feel safe.
“We’re pursuing every avenue possible,” Plenty told WHYY News.
Ervin Mears, representative of the homeowners organization, said Lawnside’s significance as a historically Black borough, first established in 1926, makes it even more important to address the hate crime swiftly as a “cohesive group.”
“This land is 1.5 square miles,” Mears said. “[It] was created so that free slaves would have a place to raise a family in safety, and they kept it secluded so that no other outside oppressors would come in and, I guess, destroy it.”
From that history came the borough’s original name, Free Haven.
“The most important thing is that this land was accepted as being sacred, and that’s the way I look at it,” he said. “This land is sacred. So every day I get up and walk around, I’m stepping on sacred grounds,” he said.
Christopher Gilmore, a Lawnside resident since 2001, came to Saturday’s meeting with his wife. He said he wanted to connect with other community members in the aftermath of the incident to be better prepared to defend against racially-motivated attacks in the future.
“Hopefully we have support systems,” he said. “It doesn’t matter if it comes from my own kind or other people, but we need to have those types of dynamics erected within our communities so that we can try to keep these racial disparities to a minimum, because it seems that they’re about to grow.”