Ray Widstrand doesn't remember what happened the night he tried to walk through a crowd of teenagers near his St. Paul apartment this summer.
But he's already forgiven the five teens who nearly beat him to death on Aug. 4.
While out for a walk Widstrand, then 26, was caught in the middle of what authorities said was a gang confrontation. He was knocked down, kicked and stomped, leaving him fighting for his life with potentially fatal brain swelling.
The horror of the brutal, random beating galvanized residents of St. Paul's Payne-Phalen neighborhood into demanding that police provide extra patrols to stop a rising tide of violence by young people that included the fatal shooting of a 17-year-old not long before Widstrand was attacked.
For a time, St. Paul police dedicated 30 extra officers to patrol the area, looking for large groups of roaming youths that were causing problems. That effort, called Operation Blue Wave, is now winding down. But in a separate sweep Wednesday, police arrested 16 members of the East Side Boyz, a violent gang authorities believe may have been involved in the fight that ensnared Widstrand.
Still, residents remain concerned about safety in the area.
Five people, one adult and four juveniles, have been charged in the assault on Widstrand. The jury trial for Issac Maiden, 19, who faces first-degree assault and aggravated robbery charges as well as two counts of gang-related crimes, will start Monday. The four juveniles face similar charges.
Even without the memory of the assault, Widstrand said he didn't think the beating was a reflection of the community.