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Parents of teen accused in near hanging say incident was a ‘backyard accident,’ not racism

People stood together for an interfaith vigil in Claremont, N.H., earlier this month. Barry Chin/Globe Staff/File

CLAREMONT, N.H. — The parents of a teenager accused of being involved in the near hanging of an 8-year-old biracial boy at a picnic table insist what happened was a tragic ‘‘backyard accident’’ and was not motivated by racism.

In an interview with Newsweek published Saturday, the teenager’s parents, Eric Sullivan and Rhianna Larkin, said he tried to startle the 8-year-old-boy into jumping off the picnic table on Aug. 28, not realizing the boy had a rope around his neck.

Larkin said her son was in tears describing what happened and tried to help the boy after he fell to the ground with the rope around his neck.

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‘‘He couldn’t apologize enough,’’ she told Newsweek. ‘‘Everyone was apologizing.’’

The 8-year-old boy’s grandmother said the teenager was part of a group that taunted him with racial slurs and pushed him off the table. The boy was treated at a hospital for neck injuries and was released.

His grandmother also said the group had thrown rocks at him and used racial slurs several days before the near hanging.

Larkin and Sullivan said that their son had been mixed up with another boy, insisting he doesn’t even know what a racial slur is. The races of Larkin, Sullivan, and their son weren’t disclosed in the Newsweek story.

Amid the publicity around the boy’s near hanging, Larkin said, life has been a ‘‘complete hell.’’

She said she had been assaulted twice and her 12-year-old daughter was jumped by two other children at school. She also said she received 32 hateful voicemails and more than 130 threats on Facebook after an anti-racism gathering in Claremont, a mostly white town.

‘‘Someone on Facebook told me that my entire family should be hung in the town square while everyone watched,’’ she said. ‘‘And that my youngest son should go first so I would know the pain of what it’s like like the other family does.’’

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Sullivan said they’re getting death threats.

‘‘We have to worry about our kids leaving the house,’’ he said.

The case is being reviewed by the state attorney general’s office to determine whether it constituted a hate crime or a civil rights violation.

Larkin said she hopes ‘‘for peace of mind in our community that there will be no more hate crimes against us as retaliation for something that was a complete backyard accident.’’

‘‘I just wish that it all could stop,’’ Larkin said. ‘‘The trauma that little boy went through hanging by that rope is enough. He’s never going to forget it.’’

More than 100 people, holding hands and singing ‘‘We Shall Overcome,’’ gathered at a park in the town on Sept. 12 to offer support to the 8-year-old boy’s family.

Town resident Rebecca MacKenzie said she felt compelled to organize the rally to draw attention to a climate of racial intolerance and xenophobia. Religious leaders, city officials and the police chief talked about the attack on the boy as a turning point in the community.