Toronto Star

‘Serial rioters’ plead guilty in Charlottes­ville riot case

Alleged white supremacis­ts attended rally to incite violence

- PAUL DUGGAN

Two alleged white supremacis­ts described by U.S. authoritie­s as travelling “serial rioters” each pleaded guilty to a federal crime Friday for instigatin­g violence during the notorious 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottes­ville, Va.

Benjamin Daley and Michael Miselis, alleged members of a white-power group called Rise Above Movement, or RAM, were among four men indicted by a federal grand jury last year on charges related to the Aug. 12, 2017, rally, which descended into a daylong scene of violent clashes between racist demonstrat­ors and counterpro­testers.

Appearing in U.S. District Court in Charlottes­ville, Daley, 26, of Redondo Beach, Calif., and Miselis, 30, of Lawndale, Calif., each pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to riot, punishable by up to five years in prison. The two other alleged RAM members, Cole White, 24, of Clayton, Calif., and Thomas Gillen, 35, of Redondo Beach, earlier pleaded guilty to the same charge.

The four are scheduled to be sentenced July 19 by Judge Norman Moon.

“These avowed white supremacis­ts travelled to Charlottes­ville to incite and commit acts of violence, not to engage in peaceful First Amendment expression,” said U.S. Attorney Thomas T. Cullen of the Western District of Virginia. In a statement, he said, “Although the First Amendment protects an organizati­on’s right to express abhorrent political views, it does not authorize senseless violence in furtheranc­e of a political agenda.”

Violent images from the demonstrat­ion, including video of a deliberate, homicidal car crash, were televised worldwide, making the Unite the Right rally a seminal event in the recent rise of emboldened white supremacis­m in the U.S.

James Fields Jr., now 21, a selfprocla­imed neo-Nazi from Ohio, was convicted of first-degree murder in state court for ramming his Dodge Challenger into a crowd of counterpro­testers, killing a woman and injuring at least 35 other people. The jury in that case recommende­d a life sentence, which is scheduled to be imposed in July. Fields also pleaded guilty to federal hate crimes and is awaiting sentencing.

The four California men were not accused of being involved in the incident.

In a statement, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Charlottes­ville described RAM as “a now-defunct, California-based, combat-ready, militant group that represente­d itself as part of the new nationalis­t and white supremacy movement.”

In March 2017, five months before the Charlottes­ville mayhem, Daley, Miselis and other RAM members attended a rally in Huntington Beach, Calif., where they “assaulted groups of protesters and other individual­s,” the statement says. Afterward, they “celebrated” by posting images of the violence on the internet “in order to recruit” new members.

In April that year, RAM members instigated violence against counterpro­testers at a racist rally in Berkeley, Calif. Then they began planning for the Charlottes­ville rally, the statement says. “Daley and Miselis expected the event would become a riot and that their experience in riots at Huntington Beach and Berkeley would be valuable.”

On Aug. 12, a group of RAM members, their hands wrapped in white tape, “collective­ly pushed, punched, kicked, choked, head-butted and otherwise assaulted several individual­s, resulting in a riot,” the statement says. As part of their plea agreements, Daley, Miselis, White and Gillen “admitted these actions were not in self-defence.”

 ??  ?? U.S. Attorney Thomas T. Cullen said the First Amendment “does not authorize senseless violence in furtheranc­e of a political agenda.”
U.S. Attorney Thomas T. Cullen said the First Amendment “does not authorize senseless violence in furtheranc­e of a political agenda.”

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