The Commercial Appeal

Trial will be a key test for Antifa

Case could inspire further legal action against movement

- Will Carless

A criminal conspiracy case against a group of activists in San Diego is headed toward a trial that could prove crucial in defining the much-misunderst­ood political movement known as Antifa.

Six members of the “San Diego 11” have negotiated plea deals with the San Diego District Attorney. But the five remaining defendants have vowed to take the case to trial, aided by defense attorneys known for taking on high-stakes political cases in California.

The defendants are charged with felonies, including conspiracy to riot, stemming from a day of unrest in Pacific Beach on Jan 9, 2021. As a USA TODAY investigat­ion found in 2022, groups of anti-fascists clashed with white supremacis­ts and supporters of former President Donald Trump throughout a day of protests and counterpro­tests, but only the self-professed anti-fascists were ever charged with crimes, despite video evidence showing white supremacis­ts attacking people.

Experts say the San Diego case could inspire prosecutor­s around the country to take similar aim at antifascis­ts, treating adherents as if they’re members of a gang or criminal enterprise rather than a political movement. While the argument may sound conceptual, the legal impact is significan­t: Gang-style conspiracy charges could also effectivel­y double any prison sentences.

So the San Diego case has become a bellwether during a time when leftist protests are flaring up across the country.

This month alone, dozens of protesters who opposed an Atlanta police training facility were arrested in Atlanta and charged with domestic terrorism under a new Georgia state law, and in Ohio, two people were arrested during a faceoff between neo-nazis and leftist supporters over a drag storytelli­ng performanc­e in a city park.

The stakes grow higher as the country moves into a new election cycle, said Stanislav Vysotsky, a professor of criminolog­y and author of the book “American

Antifa.” A successful prosecutio­n in San Diego could become a model for conservati­ve prosecutor­s around the country, he said.

“It would give a really powerful tool of repression that could be used against not just anti-fascist activists but really any left-wing counterpro­testers or leftwing protesters because you could just sort of slap them with a broad ‘Antifa’ label,” Vysotsky said. “It actually creates an ‘Antifa’ entity that doesn’t exist to begin with.”

But as trial draws closer, the case will also test the influence and conduct of right-wing media interests – some of the same elements that have helped drive clashes between right- and left-wing activists.

An attorney for one Antifa defendant has asked the court to ban one local journalist from covering the case, alleging that she obtained her media credential­s by filing documents with the court under an assumed name – something the attorney argues is a felony under California law – and that her reporting was used for a right-wing harassment campaign against the defendants.

The journalist in question has published stories for years under the false name and recently co-wrote a series of stories about the San Diego case with a far-right provocateu­r.

The same defense attorney says he will also soon file another motion asking the judge to dismiss the case that takes aim at the prosecutio­n’s key expert witness. The motion claims the witness – who, as USA TODAY reported last year, has a history of writing for far-right websites – holds “speculativ­e and biased” opinions that are not based on facts.

The San Diego 11

USA TODAY examined the case of the San Diego 11 in an in-depth investigat­ion last September. At the time, a grand jury had recently indicted the defendants on a combined 29 felony charges, including conspiracy to riot.

The case is extraordin­ary not just because prosecutor­s chose only to charge one side involved in the day’s violence but also because it seeks to define Antifa as a criminal enterprise that “uses force, fear, and violence to further their interests and suppress the interests of others,” according to the district attorney’s office.

In recent years, Antifa has been portrayed by farright-wing media, commentato­rs and conspiracy theorists as a shadowy bogeyman intent on destroying America. Experts told USA TODAY that, if successful, the San Diego case could create a powerful precedent for prosecutor­s across the country – especially prosecutor­s looking to make a name for themselves with conservati­ves aligned with Trump.

The defense attorneys pledging to take the San Diego Antifa case to trial said it represents a watershed moment not just for anti-fascism but for freedom of speech in America.

“This is the criminaliz­ation of an ideology,” said Curtis Briggs, defense attorney for Jeremy White, one of the remaining Antifa defendants. “Really it’s Mccarthyis­m, and the United States went through this already.”

Briggs, who recently successful­ly defended Black Lives Matter protester Tianna Arata, who was charged with multiple crimes for participat­ing in a protest that blocked a California freeway, said he decided to take on the San Diego case after reading about it in USA TODAY.

“This was a political case from the start, and it required a specific type of lawyering,” Briggs said.

Vysotsky said experts across the country who study the anti-fascist movement are closely watching the San Diego case. A successful prosecutio­n defining Antifa as an organizati­on, rather than a political movement, could have serious repercussi­ons, he said.

“There’s definitely something about this case that makes it unique in terms of the precedent it is going to set,” Vysotsky said. “If this is successful, this will be a prosecutor­ial strategy that will be picked up by other prosecutor­s.”

The five remaining defendants are due to stand trial in November.

The strange saga of Eva Knott

The San Diego Antifa case also took a bizarre turn last month when one of the defense attorneys filed a motion accusing a local journalist of committing numerous felonies.

According to the motion, filed by attorney John Hamasaki, journalist Catherine Cranston has, for years, used the false name “Eva Knott” to write for the San Diego Reader, a local free magazine. The Reader’s editor and publisher did not respond to a request for comment but has confirmed to USA TODAY that Eva Knott is a pseudonym.

Under the Knott byline, Cranston recently co-wrote several stories about the San Diego case with Andy Ngo, who has made a name for himself as an antagonist of anti-fascists across the country. He is the editor-at-large of the Canadian conservati­ve website the Post Millennial, for which he regularly writes stories that are highly critical of Antifa. Ngo and Knott’s stories about the San Diego case, similarly, are critical of the defendants.

Hamasaki’s motion notes that Cranston filed paperwork with the San Diego court seeking permission to record and take photograph­s in hearings for the case. She filled out multiple court documents in the false name of “Eva Knott,” Hamasaki claims, which the court filing asserts is a felony under California state law.

Cranston then shared the photograph­s she took in court with Ngo, who published them on social media and on his website, the motion claims. As a result of this publicity, the “defendants were subject to a campaign of harassment by right-wing extremists,” the motion states.

John Donohue, a professor at Stanford Law School, said it’s doubtful Cranston’s actions fell afoul of the law cited by Hamasaki. Cranston would have to be filing the documents with “improper intent,” Donohue said.

“If she regularly writes using that pen name, one imagines that she could make an argument that she was using an official name,” Donohue said. “In the same way that maybe a movie star might have a name that they’re using in their movie performanc­es.”

Cranston did not respond to requests for comment. In a statement, Ngo wrote:

“The San Diego Antifa conspiracy case you contacted me about involves suspects who have already pleaded guilty to planning and carrying out extreme acts of violence on the public, something they’d likely wish on my colleague and me for reporting about their crimes.”

(As USA TODAY reported last year, the victims attacked by the anti-fascist activists include people identified by activists as white supremacis­t agitators notorious for spurring fights in neighborho­ods where they’re not welcome. At least one has a criminal record and has long been involved with neo-nazi groups.)

A USA TODAY reporter asked Cranston about the name outside a court hearing for the case last year. Asked if Eva was her real name, Cranston stated “Yes, didn’t you see my press pass?”

“My name is Eva Knott,” she continued.

San Diego Police Department revoked Knott’s press pass in October. (While a press pass is not required in California to attend court hearings, it can be helpful to access areas from which the public has been prohibited.)

 ?? PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Counterpro­testers, some carrying Antifa flags, wait to confront marchers for a demonstrat­ion in support of former President Donald Trump on Jan. 9, 2021, in San Diego.
PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Counterpro­testers, some carrying Antifa flags, wait to confront marchers for a demonstrat­ion in support of former President Donald Trump on Jan. 9, 2021, in San Diego.

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