The Jerusalem Post

Four men charged with inciting violence at 2017 Charlottes­ville rally

- • By SARAH N. LYNCH and LISA LAMBERT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Four men from California described by prosecutor­s as members of a militant white supremacis­t group were arrested on Tuesday on charges of instigatin­g violence during a white nationalis­t rally that turned deadly in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, last year.

The criminal complaint unsealed in US District Court in Charlottes­ville charged each of the four – Benjamin Drake Daley, 25, Michael Paul Miselis, 29, Thomas Walter Gillen, 34, and Cole Evan White, 24 – with violating the federal riots statute and conspiracy to riot.

Each defendant faces 10 years in prison if convicted of both counts, authoritie­s said. No pleas were entered.

Authoritie­s said all four men flew from the West Coast in August 2017 to participat­e in the “Unite the Right” rally protesting against the removal of a statue honoring Robert E. Lee, commander of the Confederat­e Army in the US Civil War.

They are accused of physically assaulting counter-protesters they encountere­d during the August 12 rally at Emancipati­on Park in Charlottes­ville, and during a torch-lit march the night before through the University of Virginia campus, where hundreds of Unite the Right demonstrat­ors chanted “White lives matter” and “Jews will not replace us.”

The August 12 event ended with a man plowing his car into a crowd, killing one counter-demonstrat­or, 32-year-old Heather Heyer, and injuring dozens of others. The driver, James Alex Fields Jr., was charged with the killing in June. He has pleaded not guilty.

US President Donald Trump drew condemnati­on from Democratic and Republican political leaders for saying that “many sides” were to blame for the violence.

All four of the men newly accused of inciting violence were identified in an FBI affidavit as members and associates of the California-based Rise Above Movement, described as a “militant white supremacis­t organizati­on.”

Prosecutor­s said their participat­ion in beatings of counter-protesters was corroborat­ed by photograph­s and video footage from the events, some excerpted in a collection of still images printed in the affidavit.

The defendants were also accused of having “engaged in acts of violence” at previous political rallies in Huntington Beach and Berkeley, California.

Daley, Miselis and Gillen, all from Southern California, were presented with the charges during separate court appearance­s on Tuesday before a federal magistrate in Los Angeles. Each was ordered to remain held by the US Marshals Service pending further proceeding­s.

White, a San Francisco-area resident, was scheduled for his initial court hearing in Oakland on Wednesday.

All four will end up either transporte­d in federal custody back to Virginia or, if freed on bond, ordered to appear for future court dates there.

US Magistrate Judge Jean Rosenbluth denied bond for Miselis, who according to prosecutor­s had traveled with Daley to Germany, Italy and Ukraine to meet white nationalis­ts abroad.

Federal prosecutor David Ryan said thousands of rounds of ammunition, smoke bombs and flares were found at the home of Miselis at the time of his arrest. The judge cited a photograph showing him kicking someone who had fallen to the ground.

Miselis’s lawyer, Angel Navarro, described his client in court as having been a well-educated, law-biding citizen who earned a graduate degree from the University of California at Los Angeles. Navarro later told reporters the defendants were all entitled to a presumptio­n of innocence.

Attorneys for the others either declined to discuss the case with reporters or were unavailabl­e following the proceeding­s.

Thomas Cullen, US Attorney for the Western District of Virginia, said he expected the four could stand trial by year’s end.

“This case should serve as another example of the Department of Justice’s commitment to protecting the life, liberty and civil rights of all our citizens,” Cullen told a news conference.

 ?? (Stephanie Keith/Reuters) ?? WHITE NATIONALIS­TS march at the University of Virginia in Charlottes­ville in August 2017.
(Stephanie Keith/Reuters) WHITE NATIONALIS­TS march at the University of Virginia in Charlottes­ville in August 2017.

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