Daily Dispatch

Roof now faces hate-crime charges

Federal indictment is in addition to murder counts

-

AFEDERAL grand jury has indicted suspected white supremacis­t Dylann Roof on hate crime and other charges over the June 17 massacre of nine black church-goers in Charleston, South Carolina.

The 33-count indictment is in addition to South Carolina state murder and attempted murder charges against the suspect, 21, who could face the death penalty if convicted.

“Racially-motivated violence such as this is the original domestic terrorism,” said attorney-general Loretta Lynch in announcing the indictment­s in Washington.

“For these crimes, Roof faces federal penalties of up to life imprisonme­nt or the death penalty,” Lynch said.

Roof was arrested in North Carolina a day after he allegedly joined an evening bible study class at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, then shot nine participan­ts with a .45-calibre Glock handgun. The victims included Emanuel’s chief pastor Clementa Pinckney, who was also a South Carolina state senator. Three people survived the shooting.

A website attributed to Roof was later found to contain racist views towards African-Americans, as well as photograph­s of Roof brandishin­g guns and the Confederat­e battle flag.

Lynch said the US government was charging Roof with nine month to no longer fly the controvers­ial saltire outside the South Carolina legislatur­e.

“Roof conceived his goal of increasing racial tensions and seeking retributio­n for perceived wrongs he believed African-Americans have committed against white people,” said Lynch, who is African-American herself. “To carry out these twin goals of fanning racial flames and exacting revenge, Roof further decided to seek out and murder African-Americans because of their race.”

Cornell University law professor Jens Ohlin said any penalty Roof might get for murder at the state level would dwarf any sentence that may emerge from a federal hate-crimes trial. “But criminal law is about more than just punishment,” Ohlin said.

“It is also about signalling an important community value – that criminal conduct motivated by racism or bigotry is especially heinous and hurtful to the fabric of our free society.”

South Carolina has carried out 43 executions since January 1985, all for murder.

For its part, the federal government has not carried out an execution since 2003. — AFP

Crime motivated by racism… is especially heinous

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? SEQUEL TO MASSACRE: US attorney-general Loretta Lynch has announced a federal grand jury has indicted suspected white supremacis­t Dylann Roof on hate-crime and other charges. Here, she speaks about the murders of nine African-Americans at an historic...
Picture: REUTERS SEQUEL TO MASSACRE: US attorney-general Loretta Lynch has announced a federal grand jury has indicted suspected white supremacis­t Dylann Roof on hate-crime and other charges. Here, she speaks about the murders of nine African-Americans at an historic...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa