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BLOOMINGTON — A man said he was almost lynched over the July 4 weekend at Lake Monroe in Bloomington. He said a group of people physically assaulted him and threatened him using racially-charged language.

The mayor of Bloomington has condemned what he saw in a series of videos that has now gone viral, being shared thousands of times. The video shows several men holding a black man against a tree, with his arms behind his back, allegedly threatening to lynch him.

‘Let him go, dude, please let him go. Please let him go.’

“To be pinned down at the tree and hear him yell at his friend, ‘Get a noose,’ not even a rope, to get a noose with so much intent and the connotation that that carries in our society, I knew my life was in danger,” Vauhxx Booker said.

In disbelief is how Booker said he felt when men were seen holding him against his will — shouting ‘white power’ and other racial slurs.

“There was a moment where a white woman that was standing by yelled out not to kill me and as I was underneath these men struggling to breathe I realized that she was talking about me, not to kill me,” Booker said.

Booker said he and some friends went to watch the lunar eclipse on the 4th of July at Lake Monroe. A group of men informed them the route they were taking to get to the public access beach was on private property but then things got hostile, leaving Booker with a minor concussion, abrasions and patches of hair ripped out.

“What went through my mind was I could be the next person like that or I could be the next hashtag,” Booker said.

What saved his life, Booker said, was his friends along with bystanders that heard the commotion and demanded the attackers let him go, refusing to leave.

“They stayed. It made a difference,” Booker said. “I wasn’t going to be a Black person that died and heard my own death narrated in front of me.”

“Horrified,” Shelli Yoder, Democratic candidate for Indiana Senate District 40, said. “I am horrified, not surprised, but disgusted.”

“My heart is breaking for our town,” Nicole Bolden, Bloomington city clerk, said. “This is Bloomington. And I know people love to say this doesn’t happen in Bloomington. It does. A lot.”

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