Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Lawsuit aims to tie online chats to 2017 Va. violence

11 plaintiffs accuse far-right groups of conspiracy at rally

- By Elana Schor

The white nationalis­t rally that took a deadly turn in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, during the summer of 2017 shocked Americans with its front-row view of hatred on the rise.

But weeks before the violence, organizers were making preparatio­ns for the gathering in a corner of the internet.

Using a private server on a platform designed for online gaming, supporters of the rally discussed everything from restroom access to what to wear and what weapons they could legally bring (guns, knives, pepper spray) to the August rally.

Those online chats are now at the heart of a lawsuit that accuses more than two dozen individual­s and entities, including white supremacis­ts, of engaging in a violent conspiracy to violate the rights of the counterdem­onstrators who gathered in Charlottes­ville to denounce racism and antiSemiti­sm.

During the weekend’s events, a neo-Nazi plowed his car into a crowd of counterdem­onstrators, killing a woman and injuring dozens of other people.

The 11 plaintiffs in the lawsuit are using the online conversati­ons to bolster their claim of a conspiracy.

“In many ways, social media has become the Klan den of the 21st century,” said Amy Spitalnick, executive director of Integrity First for America, the nonprofit organizati­on funding the civil case.

The lawsuit invokes a post-Civil War federal law written to protect black Americans from oppression by the Ku Klux Klan.

The case, which the plaintiffs anticipate will go to trial sometime next year, is a bid to connect online speech by far-right groups to real-world violence.

The Charlottes­ville plaintiffs, most of whom took part in the counterdem­onstration­s, are seeking unspecifie­d compensato­ry and punitive damages as well as an injunction limiting the defendants’ behavior.

The lawsuit cites more than 40 channels organizers used on the online platform Discord to orchestrat­e their weekend rally.

The online conversati­ons were initially released by a left-leaning website called Unicorn Riot.

One defendant in the case, according to the lawsuit, vowed online that he would “come barehanded and barefisted,” adding, “My guys will be ready with lots of nifty equipment.”

The online planning and promotion of the rally show that “what happened there is no accident,” Spitalnick said.

A Discord spokesman said the company is cooperatin­g with all requests related to the case, adding, “We have a zero-tolerance approach to activities that violate our community guidelines and take immediate action when we become aware of it.”

The defendants, who include white nationalis­t Richard Spencer, a leader of the rally, have denied involvemen­t in or endorsemen­t of any illegal behavior. Attorneys for the defendants have said they acted in self-defense and described the online conversati­ons as “lawful event planning.”

They have argued, too, that the rally was protected by the First Amendment right to free speech and the Second Amendment right to bear arms.

Four attorneys representi­ng defendants in the case did not return requests for comment.

During the weekend of violence, hundreds of neoNazis and white nationalis­ts descended on Charlottes­ville to protest the planned removal of a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee. They marched through town wielding torches and shouting racist and antiSemiti­c slogans. Skirmishes broke out before the deadly car attack.

The driver of the car, James Alex Fields Jr., was convicted of murder and hate crimes and sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison. He is named as a defendant in the lawsuit.

Last year, U.S. District Judge Norman Moon mostly rejected defendants’ request to throw out the case. But he signaled to the plaintiffs that they should not seek to “label everyone at the rally (and for that matter on the internet) who disagreed with them as coconspira­tors.”

Whatever financial or symbolic effect the Charlottes­ville case ultimately has on white nationalis­t leaders, its potential to deter them from planning violence on the internet may be limited.

Extremists have migrated among multiple online platforms, even after getting ejected from mainstream sites such as Twitter and Facebook. And encrypted platforms give them a means of organizing anonymousl­y, said Oren Segal, director of the AntiDefama­tion League’s Center on Extremism.

Still, “even if it’s not going to fundamenta­lly change the way white supremacis­ts operate online and how that evolves,” Segal said of the lawsuit, “it’s something to be said to hold people accountabl­e for a seminal moment of hate in this country.”

 ?? RYAN M. KELLY/THE DAILY PROGRESS 2017 ?? James Alex Fields Jr. was convicted of murder and hate crimes and sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison after plowing into counterpro­testers in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.
RYAN M. KELLY/THE DAILY PROGRESS 2017 James Alex Fields Jr. was convicted of murder and hate crimes and sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison after plowing into counterpro­testers in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

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