Maria Ha, 25, and 31-year-old Dan Lee say they were verbally harassed while on the street in Kips Bay and told to go back to China by an unknown woman on Sunday.
Woman tells Asian Americans to 'go back to China' in racist rant
The question so many have been asking -- where is this woman from? And who is she?
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Eyewitness News traced her face mask back to a performing arts theater in Woodstock called The Colony. On its website, there were posts from people claiming to know the suspect, saying they "will never speak to her again."
Multiple sources close to the investigation then confirmed to Eyewitness News that it was the suspect.
The owners of the Colony released a statement on Facebook disavowing the woman's actions and clarifying she had no association with the establishment other than wearing one of their masks.
The statement read, in part, "Regarding the horrible incident in NYC where a woman in a taxi cab engaged in a racist, hate-filled anti-Asian tirade towards a couple, while wearing a mask from our establishment: Please understand the Colony has absolutely no connection with this person in any way shape or form other than she happens to be wearing one of our masks. We find her attitude, words and actions to be absolutely abhorrent and sickening."
By Tuesday, the woman had deleted her social media accounts and multiple calls and emails to her went unanswered.
Several family members would not put us in touch with her either. Eyewitness News even tried to reach her at her home.
It turns out she lives near where the incident occurred on Sunday, at 22nd and First Avenue.
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She is neighbors with her victims, but she isn't your ordinary neighbor. Her name is Maura Moynihan, the daughter of the late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
She admitted to Eyewitness News on Wednesday that she is the woman seen in the video.
She was seen at the unveiling of the Moynihan Train Hall back in January.
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In a statement, Moynihan called the dispute a misunderstanding saying, "It had nothing whatsoever to do with any bias or racism or anti-Asian American prejudice, as has been wrongly suggested."
She says it was a dispute over a cab and denied any racism was involved.
"I have devoted most of my life to working with and for Asian people, most particularly in the cause of securing basic human rights for the Tibetan people in their continuing struggle against Communist China," Moynihan said.
Yet when confronted by the victim's husband, she didn't deny hurling a racist remark.
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"Just because she's done all these things in the past does not justify what she said," Lee said.
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Moynihan goes on to say she would be happy to meet with the couple to explain.
"What she said wasn't an apology," Ha said. "We don't accept that behavior at all, so I don't want to meet her. Why would I meet her?"
Moynihan did not directly address the words she allegedly said in her statement.
"This is extremely hurtful," Lee said. "Like for me personally, I was born in the U.S., my entire life, and to be told to leave this country, to go back to Communist China, is seriously offensive. I was born here. This is my home."
Police say the investigation is active and ongoing.
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