Crime & Safety
WATCH: Japanese-American Danville Resident Told To 'Go To China'
A Japanese-American woman recorded her Danville neighbor shouting at her to take her mask off and "go to China."

DANVILLE, CA — A Japanese-American Danville resident wearing a mask outside was told to “Go to China” by a neighbor, new Twitter footage shows.
A young woman identified as Catherine told ABC7 anchor Dion Lim that she stepped outside of her Danville home wearing a mask when a neighbor shouted, “Take off your mask!” Catherine then began to record.
“What did you just say? Did you tell me to go to [expletive] China?” Catherine asked her neighbor in the video.
Find out what's happening in Danvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
“Go to China!” the neighbor, who is a few yards away atop a balcony, shouted back. “If you want to be scared…”
The video then stops. Catherine told Lim that she filed a police report, and plans to move to Vallejo, which is 24.5% Asian, according to 2020 census data. “It’s def scary,” she told Lim. “I’m glad I’ll be surrounded by people who look like me.”
Find out what's happening in Danvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Danville is 14.8% Asian, according to the most recent census data.
Catherine also told Lim that a Black neighbor came home to find a racial epithet scrawled on their door.
The Town of Danville issued a statement Thursday morning condemning the incident:
"The Town has been made aware of this incident based upon the article that was posted in the Danville Patch earlier this morning. After viewing the video, police are currently reviewing this as a hate incident. Danville PD continue to encourage community members to report any hate incident by calling 925 820 2144. The Town condemns the actions and speech recorded in the posted video and directed toward the person recording the video. We value and support our Asian American community members and are committed to inclusivity and welcoming people from all backgrounds. We will not condone or tolerate violence, intimidation or hate in any form."
The San Ramon Valley Diversity Coalition also released a statement, that reads in part:
"The SRVDC is saddened to see this kind of hateful incident happening in our community. We
would strongly urge our elected representatives and appointed officials to support all of our
community members by responding quickly and by investigating thoroughly every reported act
of hate. We also would like to encourage our neighbors and community members to speak up
when they see anyone being intimidated or bullied for their choice to wear a mask. The
pandemic has been a difficult time for all of us and while mandates are being lifted, we must
continue to honor and support an individual’s choice to wear a mask. Racism and hate have no place in our community."
The United States and most other Western countries have witnessed a dramatic surge in anti-Asian hate crimes since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. Anti-Asian hate crimes increased 339 percent in the United States in 2021, according to a study from the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism. The study also found that anti-Asian hate crime increased by 124 percent from 2019 to 2020. 3,795 firsthand complaints of racism and discrimination against Asian-Americans were filed between March 2020 and February 2021, according to the Stop AAPI Hate Coalition.
San Francisco, which has one of the largest Asian populations in the country, saw a staggering 567 percent increase from 2020 to 2021, from nine to 60 crimes. That was higher than New York City, which saw a 343 percent increase from 30 to 133 crimes, and Los Angeles, which saw a 173 percent increase.
Half of the victims were allegedly targeted by a single unnamed man, who is accused of vandalizing at least 20 establishments.
Videos similar to the one recorded in Danville can be found all over the country. A cardiologist in an Oregon grocery store almost had her mask ripped off, according to a CNN report. The woman, identified only as Jae, told CNN the man told her she brought the “China virus” to this community and should get out, and then tried to rip her mask off her face. He then called her the b-word, and then a racial slur for Chinese people.
"I'm not even Chinese. I'm Korean, for God's sake, you know?” Jae told CNN.
Other Asians recounted having customers throw masks at them, being blocked from leaving parking lots by other cars, and more, according to the report. Some incidents turned deadly: in New York City, Bay Area native Michelle Go was pushed in front of a subway, to her death. In March 2021, six Asians and two other people were killed in a shooting spree at an Atlanta spa.
“This isn’t a physical attack,” Lim wrote of the Danville incident. “But early in the pandemic I covered a LOT of verbal hate toward Asian Americans. It then seemed to escalate to physical attacks. It’s very sad for me to hear racist remarks like this today.”
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.