The Oklahoman

S.C. killer’s friend gets jail for hindering FBI

- BY JEFFREY COLLINS

CHARLESTON, S.C. — During a night of vodka, cocaine, marijuana and video games, Joey Meek listened as a childhood buddy confided that he hated blacks so much he was going to kill them at a Charleston church.

Meek said he thought his friend was all talk until a week later, when news broke of a deadly shooting rampage at Emanuel AME church. But instead of calling authoritie­s, Meek talked another friend out of going to police and giving them Dylann Roof’s name. And then he lied to the FBI about his conversati­on with Roof.

For those crimes, Meek, 22, was sentenced Tuesday to more than two years in prison.

The punishment was handed down by the federal judge who presided at Roof’s trial, which ended in January with the avowed white supremacis­t sentenced to death for massacring nine black people as they bowed their heads in prayer during a Wednesday night Bible study session on June 17, 2015.

Unlike Roof, Meek showed remorse for his crimes.

“I’m really, really sorry. A lot of beautiful lives were taken,” he said, reading from a statement.

He cried as he told the judge he fears retributio­n behind bars: “I don’t know if I’ll make it out of prison alive. I’m scared.”

U.S. District Judge Richard Gergel’s 27-month prison term was the minimum punishment under federal sentencing guidelines. The government wanted a stiffer sentence to make an example out of Meek and because he could have stopped the massacre.

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