2 get prison for threatening child’s party
They are convicted of yelling racial slurs while waving a Confederate flag, and the man of pointing a shotgun.
DOUGLASVILLE — A white man and woman who were among a large group of people waving Confederate flags and threatening violence at a black child’s birthday party in 2015 have been sentenced to lengthy prison terms.
Jose Ismael Torres, 26, and Kayla Rae Norton, 25, were part of a group of 15 people who disrupted the 8-year-old’s party in Douglasville in July 2015, less than a month after white supremacist Dylann Roof killed nine African-Americans at a historic black church in South Carolina.
Roof brandished Confederate flags in several photographs that came to light soon after his arrest and had said he intended to start a race war with the killings.
Torres and Norton were found guilty Monday of yelling racial slurs and threatening to kill partygoers, even the kids. At one point, Torres aimed a shotgun at the party, prosecutors said.
Torres was sentenced to 13 years in prison. Norton received six years, news outlets reported.
They were among four people in the group charged with felonies. The other two pleaded guilty and are serving shorter prison sentences.
Torres and Norton wept as the sentences were handed down.
“Their actions were motivated by racial hatred,” said Superior Court Judge William McClain.
The judge ordered the two permanently banished from Douglas County once they are released.