The Borneo Post

Life in prison for neo-Nazi in Charlottes­ville attack

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WASHINGTON: An American neo-Nazi who drove his car into a group of counter- protesters last year during a white supremacis­t rally in Virginia, killing a woman, was sentenced to life in prison by a jury on Tuesday.

James Alex Fields Jr, 21, was found guilty of murder and other charges last week following a two-week jury trial in Charlottes­ville.

The same seven-woman, fiveman jury that convicted Fields sentenced him to life in prison plus an additional 419 years.

Fields will be formally sentenced by Judge Richard Moore on March 29. The judge can reduce the sentence imposed by the jury but is not allowed to increase it.

Fields rammed his car into the counter-protesters on August 12, 2017, killing 32-year- old paralegal Heather Heyer and injuring dozens of other people.

Those counter- protesters had gathered in opposition to a group of white supremacis­ts who came to the university town to protest the removal of a Confederat­e statue.

President Donald Trump drew broad criticism in the aftermath of the mayhem when he spoke of “blame on both sides,” appearing to establish a moral equivalenc­e between the white supremacis­ts and those who opposed them.

The incident turned Charlottes­ville into a symbol of the growing audacity of the far right under Trump.

Fields had driven overnight from his hometown of Maumee, Ohio, to support the “Unite the Right” rally to protest the removal of a statue of Robert E Lee, the top general of the proslavery Confederac­y during the 1861-1865 American Civil War.

Dressed in a white polo shirt and khaki pants, the uniform of the white supremacis­ts, he took part in racist, antiSemiti­c and homophobic chants, according to footage played in the courtroom.

The prosecutio­n played videos that showed Fields stop his car and reverse up a hill before commencing his deadly assault on counter- protesters who were singing and celebratin­g after city officials had ordered the far- right demonstrat­ors to leave.

In order to build their case of a pre-meditated attack, prosecutor­s presented a text Fields sent to his mother before departing for the rally after she had asked him to be careful

“We’re not the one ( sic) who need to be careful,” he replied, alongside a photo of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, whom he has long admired.

They also showed the jury two Instagram posts Fields uploaded in May last year that depicted a car ramming into a group of protesters, arguing that he ultimately chose to live out that fantasy when the opportunit­y arose three months later. — AFP

 ??  ?? This handout photo provided by Connie Moultroup (right) shows her taking a selfie with her mother Genevieve Purinton after reuniting thanks to DNA testing. — AFP photo
This handout photo provided by Connie Moultroup (right) shows her taking a selfie with her mother Genevieve Purinton after reuniting thanks to DNA testing. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? James Alex Fields Jr
James Alex Fields Jr

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