Justice Department Obtains Guilty Pleas In Cross Burning Incidents; Race-Based Harassment, Intimidation Used To Drive Families From Homes, Say Feds
In two separate incidents, the U.S. Department of Justice recently announced:
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#1: Two Indiana Men Plead Guilty to Cross Burning:
- Richard LaShure, 41, and Aaron Latham, 20, both of Muncie, Ind., pleaded guilty to conspiring to violate the civil rights of an African American family and to interfering with their housing rights by burning a cross in the family’s yard. According to the charging document, on July 25, 2008, the two men, acting with the assistance of a third participant, built a cross and poured gasoline on it, then set it on fire in the yard of an African-American family who lived in the neighborhood. They will be sentenced on Nov. 5, 2009.
- This is the second case in two years in which the Civil Rights Division has brought charges for a cross burning that occurred in Muncie, Ind. Two men were convicted in 2008 for burning a cross at the home of a woman who had biracial children. "These two men used a despicable and unmistakable symbol of hatred, the burning cross, to intimidate a family because they are African American," said Loretta King, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division. "The Civil Rights Division will continue to prosecute this type of illegal, hateful behavior to the fullest extent of the law."
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#2: Four Arkansas Men Convicted of Civil Rights Charges in Cross Burning Conspiracy:
- The Justice Department announced that Jacob A. Wingo, Richard W. Robbins, Clayton D. Morrison and Darren E. McKim pleaded guilty [...] to conspiring to drive a woman and her children from their home in Donaldson, Ark., because they associated with African Americans. A fifth defendant, Dustin Nix, 21, pleaded guilty to similar charges in July 2009.
- All defendants pleaded guilty in federal court in Hot Springs, Ark., to civil rights charges and charges of making a false statement to a federal law enforcement officer. Each admitted and pleaded guilty to a felony civil rights charge for conspiring with each other to force a woman and her young children from their home by threats and intimidation because she associated with African Americans. Wingo and Morrison also pleaded guilty to an additional civil rights charge related to their direct involvement in an attempt to burn a cross at the victims’ home to intimidate the victims into leaving. All four defendants also pleaded guilty to a related charge of lying to agents of the FBI in an attempt to cover their
conduct.(1)
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(1) In other related press releases from the U.S. Justice Department in connection with those charged with the use of fire to interfere with housing rights of others, a felony:
- (4-27-2009) Anderson County Man Indicted for Cross-Burning: Steven D. Archer, 49, Heiskell, Tennessee, has been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of willfully interfering with a couple's federal housing rights because of their race by burning a wooden cross, in violation of Title 42, U.S. Code § 3631(a), outside the residence in Anderson County that the victims were occupying.
- (11-26-2008) West Virginia Man Indicted on Federal Civil Rights Charges for Allegedly Burning a Home: Daryl Lee Fierce, 69, of Charleston, W.Va., was indicted by a federal grand jury for using fire to intimidate and interfere with a person’s housing rights because African-American and biracial individuals visited the person in her home.
- (11-21-2008) Rutherford County Man Sentenced In U.S. District Court In Asheville In Connection With Cross Burning Incident (Defendant to Serve More Than Two Years in Federal Prison): Curtis Gene Worley, 51, of Spindale, North Carolina, was sentenced Wednesday to serve 28 months in federal prison, followed by two years of supervised release. Worley was indicted in October 2007 on one count alleging use of fire to injure, intimidate, and interfere with rights to occupy a dwelling because of race or color. According to information presented in open court during the hearings, Worley built and burned a cross on or near the property occupied by his neighbor, an adult African American female. See also: (10-25-2007) North Carolina Man Indicted In Cross-Burning Case: The indictment charged that Worley used a burning cross to intimidate and interfere with an African-American family because of race and because the family was occupying a dwelling. The indictment charges that Worley violated Title 42, U.S. Code § 3631(a), which provides criminal penalties for interference with the rights of citizens under the Fair Housing Act. Since 2001 and up through and including this prosecution, the Civil Rights Division brought 41 cross-burning prosecutions and convicted 60 defendants for these crimes.
(6-6-2008) Muncie, Indiana, Man Sentenced to 121 Months in Cross Burning Case: Kyle Milbourn of Muncie, Ind., was sentenced by a federal judge [...] for a hate crime stemming from a cross burning last year that was directed at a woman and her three biracial children. Milbourn was convicted by a jury of one count of interfering with the housing rights of another person; one count of conspiring to interfere with civil rights; one count of using fire during the commission of a felony; and one count of tampering with a witness.
- (4-23-2007) Two Men Plead Guilty In Lassen County Cross Burning: Kevin William Ridenour, 21, and Nicholas Edward Craig, 18, both of Westwood, California, each pleaded guilty in Sacramento to interference with housing rights, a felony. The crime relates to the burning of a cross outside the rectory of a Catholic church in Westport, California. The Priest who resides in the rectory is from Rwanda, central Africa, and was assigned to Westport by the Catholic Archdiocese of Sacramento in October, 2006. The defendants admitted that they did so in order to threaten and intimidate the Priest because of his race, and the fact that he was occupying the rectory building. They also admitted that, while building the cross, they discussed the fact that the "KKK" had used burning crosses to intimidate black persons.
- (1-31-2007) Florida Man Sentenced in Cross Burning: Neal Chapman Coombs, a 50-year-old resident of Hastings, Fla., was sentenced to 14 months in prison, to be followed by three years of supervised release. Coombs pleaded guilty to a racially-motivated civil rights crime involving a cross burning. Coombs was charged with knowingly and willfully intimidating an African-American family that was negotiating for the purchase of a house in Hastings, Fla., by threat of force and the use of fire. Specifically, it was alleged that Coombs’ actions were motivated by the family’s race and that he burned a cross on property adjacent to the house. According to the press release, the plea agreement indicatedt that Coombs, who is Caucasian, made a remark about having a “house-warming,” and also made derogatory remarks about the visiting family.
- (9-26-2006): Federal Jury Convicts Two for Cross Burning: A federal jury convicted Christopher Mitchell and James Bradley Weems of burning a cross in front of the home of an African-American man in Fouke, Ark. The jury convicted each defendant of one count of conspiracy to violate the victim’s civil rights. The evidence at trial established that Mitchell and Weems, attended a party where they discussed an African-American man who lived nearby, using racial slurs to describe him. The defendants, along with a third man, Christopher Baird, who had pleaded guilty to his role in the offense, used wooden boards to erect a cross. The defendants then planted the cross near the home of the African-American man and lit it on fire. Witnesses testified that as a result of the cross burning, the African-American victim and the family he lived with all moved from their home because they were too frightened to remain in the town.
- (9-2-2004) Two Men Plead Guilty In Kentucky Cross Burning Case: Matthew Scudder, of Florence, Kentucky, who was 18 at the time the crime was committed, and James Foster, of Independence, Kentucky, who was 19, admitted to conspiring to threaten and intimidate an African-American couple and their two children in order to drive them from their Burlington home. Scudder admitted that on July 2, 2004 he burned a wooden cross on the family's lawn. Foster admitted that he helped carry out the plan.
- (6-15-2004) Indianapolis Man Sentenced For Cross Burning: The Justice Department announced the sentencing of Jerry Dean Landis, of Indianapolis, Indiana, to 18 months in prison for his role in a July 2000 cross burning. Landis participated in the building and burning of a cross in the front yard of an African-American family in Indianapolis. Landis admitted that he and his associates took part in the cross burning in order to “send a message” to the family. Since 2001 and up through and including this 2004 prosecution, the Department prosecuted 29 cross burning cases, filing criminal civil rights charges against 46 defendants.
- (2-9-2004) Macomb, Illinois Man Sentenced For Cross Burning Targeting Interracial Couple: Charles Lambert was sentenced to thirty-seven months in prison for his role in a July 2001 cross burning targeting an interracial couple. Forest Hatley, a co-defendant in this case, was previously sentenced to forty-one months imprisonment and three years of supervised release. Lambert and Hatley each admitted that they agreed to burn a cross at a home in Macomb, Illinois where an interracial couple lived. The defendants constructed a cross and doused it with gasoline. The two men then transported the cross to the victims’ yard, planted it in front of the home and ignited it. Lambert and Hatley also admitted this action was taken to intimidate the couple because of the male’s race and because he was living with a person of another race.
- (1-29-2004) Georgia Man Sentenced For Cross Burning In Moultrie: The Justice Department announced the sentencing of Moultrie, Georgia resident Michael Craig Jordan for his role in an April 2002 cross-burning. Jordan pled guilty to criminal civil rights violations in November 2003. He admitted to participating in the April 2002 burning of a wooden cross with the purpose of preventing a biracial African-American and Hispanic couple - as well as their two young children - from moving into the house next door.
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