Moment homeless man attacks Amazon engineer with a baseball bat leaving her with a fractured skull
Terrifying moment Seattle homeless man cracks female Amazon engineer’s skull with a baseball bat as she walks home in random attack: Suspect, 31, finally in jail after 16-year crime spree that includes arrests for robbery, burglary and assault
Wantez Tullos, 31, was charged on Friday with first-degree assault after he was caught on surveillance footage attacking Emma (Shegnang) Wang He has been arrested 26 times since 2008, including for first-degree robbery, theft, assault and three violations of no-contact domestic violence Video from January 31 shows the woman walking home with a shopping bag in her hand when Tulloss came up behind herHe dropped the bags he was carrying and used both hands to whack her in the head with a baseball batShe was left bleeding with a fractured skull and is set to undergo surgeryTulloss was identified due to his distinctive face tattoosHe was living in a transitional housing facility less than 500 feet from the crime, where he hid the clothes he was wearing in an oven Tulloss, who has a previous criminal history including domestic violence charges and first-degree robbery, is now in jail, where he remains on a $150,000 bailHe faces up to 12 years in prison, and additional time in community custody.
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A homeless man with a 16-year violent criminal history has been charged with first-degree assault after he was caught on surveillance footage taking a ‘full body swing’ with a baseball bat and hitting a woman in the back of the head, leaving her bleeding with a fractured skull.
Wantez Tulloss, 31, has been arrested 11 times going back to 2012 and was wanted by police in Washington for third degree theft.
On Monday January 31, he was filmed taking a swing at Emma Shegnang Wang, who was named by prosecutors in court documents. He knocked Wang to the ground, hitting her on her skull and back, then fled, taking his bags with him.
She lay helpless on the ground with blood pouring from her ear while bystanders rushed to help her.
Wang is an engineer at Amazon Web Services who lives in Seattle. She is now recovering and will need to undergo surgery.
Police reports obtained by DailyMail.com describe how Tulloss had been spotted by others moments earlier, swinging the bat in an alleyway. One witness said they heard him smashing Wang’s skull and thought he’d taken a hit at a concrete wall because of the sound it made.
The attack was random, and police have not yet been able to determine if there was a motive. Wang did not see her attacker and it’s unclear if he said anything to her.
After hitting her, he went for a slice of pizza and then was arrested.
The tattooed criminal’s rap sheet includes charges for fourth degree assault, theft and reckless driving. It’s unclear when he was last in jail – or why he was on the streets when he poses such a clear risk.
Prosecutors begged a judge to deny him bail, saying he should not be allowed to walk the city’s streets.
Tulloss, whose criminal rap sheet begins in 2008, is shown in 2020 after being booked for domestic assault. His forehead and neck are covered in Gucci logo tattoos and he has a LOuis Vuitton logo on his cheek
Surveillance footage caught the victim walking home with a bag in her hand on January 31 just before 6.30pm in Seattle’s Belltown neighborhood
Tulloss approached her from behind, dropped his bags and whacked her with a baseball bat
The victim fell face-flat to the ground as Tulloss walked away. Police say he went to grab a slice of pizza after the attack
‘Since 2012, courts in Washington State have issued 11 warrants for the defendant’s arrest. The defendant currently has an outstanding warrant from Kirkland Municipal court for theft 3rd degree. The defendant is unlikely to appear for court out of custody.
‘The defendant is a significant danger to the community and very likely to commit a violent offense if he remains out of custody,’ prosecutor Brynn N. H. Jacobson said.
The video shows Wang walking down the street in the city’s Belltown neighborhood wearing a black jacket and a KN95 face mask, with a shopping bag in hand, when Tulloss approached from behind.
He then dropped the bags he was carrying and whacked her from behind with both hands on a baseball bat.
The woman immediately fell face-down as the man walked away.
Authorities say Tulloss had not known the woman prior to the attack just before 6.30pm last Monday.
Medics on the scene last Monday found the woman, whose family is all overseas, lying on her back on the sidewalk with blood coming from her right ear.
They said they heard a sound that made them turn back, and watched Tulloss pick up his bags and walk away with a bat in his hand next to the woman, who had collapsed on the ground.
The witnesses rushed to the woman’s aid and promptly called 911. The victim is now being treated for a fractured skull and a possible concussion at Harborview Medical Center, and is set to undergo surgery.
Seattle police circulated the video of the incident with a photo of the suspect and received a response from a fellow officer who identified the suspect as Tulloss the next day.
The officer said he remembered seeing the man downtown on January 28 because of his distinctive checkered facial tattoos and used a police database to look for individuals with them.
During the course of the investigation, police learned Tulloss lives at the AL Humphrey House, a transient housing facility run by Plymouth Housing as part of the city’s Housing First strategy – in which the homeless are given shelter with no conditions before being provided with services to address the underlying causes of their homelessness, KTTH reports.
According to its website, Plymouth Housing creates a ‘non-judgmental space’ for its residents to ‘make changes if, and when they are ready.’
The AL Humphrey House is located less than 500 feet from where the woman was hit.
Following Tulloss’s arrest, Seattle police officers obtained a search warrant for his apartment at the facility and found the clothes he was wearing in the video footage hidden in the oven.
And while the bags he was seen carrying were also recovered, police did not find a baseball bat.
Tulloss lives at the AL Humphrey House (pictured), a transient housing facility run by Plymouth Housing as part of the city’s Housing First strategy. It is located less than 500 feet from where the woman was hit
Robberies were up 18 percent in 2021 over the year before and aggravated assaults were up a whopping 24 percent, leading to a 10 percent increase in violent crimes
Shootings increased 40 percent over 2020, with 143 resulting in a non-fatal injury and 31 resulting in a fatal injury
The attack comes amid an increase in violent crimes within the city.
According to the Seattle Police Department’s 2021 Crime Report, robberies were up 18 percent over the year before and aggravated assaults were up a whopping 24 percent, leading to a 10 percent increase in violent crimes.
In total, the city reached a 14-year high in violent crimes.
Shootings, meanwhile, increased by 40 percent over 2020, with 143 resulting in a non-fatal injury and 31 resulting in a fatal injury.
To address the growing problem Mayor Bruce Harrell unveiled a proposal to hire more officers on Friday night to respond to crimes in the city as the police force remains below staffing levels.
Last year, Interim Police Chief Adrian Diaz said the Seattle police force needed a minimum of 1,400 officers to deal with the city’s crime rate, but there are now fewer than 1,000 deployable officers and the department has only budgeted for 1,350 officers, KOMO reports.
And following the mayor’s announcement, Seattle police ended up investigating a string of shootings over the weekend, including a gun battle in Capitol Hill in which more than 40 bullets were fired and a shooting in the Seattle Chinatown-International District.
Critics say more needs to be done to address the increasing crime rate, but when Seattle City Attorney Ann Davison announced she was changing policy to make charging decisions against all of the accused within five days, she was met with opposition, specifically by City Councilmember Andrew Lewis, who argued that repeat offenders who are habitually prosecuted for minor crimes will continue to offend.
Victoria Beach, a member o the African American Community Advisory Council to Seattle Police, also suggested the department bring in outside help.
‘With all respects to our mayor, the problem is way bigger bigger than I think a lot of people imagined,’ she said, adding: ‘I’m so tired of hearing this plan and their broken promises. We have to be real with each other: We’re in a mess.’