The Anonymous
Bag On My Head

Mario González and his wife Delaina Yaun ventured to Youngs Asian Massage near Acworth, Georgia, last week for a relaxing couples activity.
Yaun had just gotten off from work, and the two were happy about getting to unwind with a massage. As they received treatments in separate rooms, González heard the gunfire ring out.
"About an hour in, almost at the end, I heard the shots," he told the Spanish-language newspaper Mundo Hispánico."I didn't see anything. Only, I started to think it was in the room where my wife was."
When law enforcement arrived at the scene, González told Mundo Hispánico, he was put in the back of a patrol vehicle and detained by authorities. He tried to get information about what had happened to his wife, but said his questions initially went unanswered.
It would be hours before he would learn that Yaun, 33, was one of four people who died at the spa in Cherokee County that day. Eight people were killed in a series of attacks on Atlanta-area Asian spas on March 16.
Authorities later located the suspect, Robert Aaron Long, about 150 miles south of Atlanta in Crisp County and took him into custody.
González told Mundo Hispánico he was held for approximately four hours, until the investigation led authorities to Long as the suspect.
"When they found out I was the husband, they told me she was dead," he said. "I wanted to know before."
González said he was frustrated at how he was treated, suggesting it was "maybe because I am Mexican."
In the video interview with Mundo Hispánico, he pointed to marks on his arm that appeared to be from the handcuffs he was in the day before.
CNN has attempted to reach González but has so far been unsuccessful.
https://edition.cnn.com/2021/03/22/...-handcuffed-husband-of-victim-trnd/index.html