East Bay Times

Charges tossed against alleged White supremacis­ts

Prosecutor­s say they'll appeal the decision by judge

- By Jakob Rodgers jrodgers @bayareanew­sgroup.com

Suggesting that prosecutor­s were politicall­y biased, a federal judge last week tossed charges against two alleged members of a White-supremacis­t group who were accused of inciting riots nearly seven years ago in Berkeley.

U.S. District Judge Cormac J. Carney said prosecutor­s acted unconstitu­tionally when they sought charges against Robert Rundo and Robert Boman under the federal AntiRiot Act. In issuing his ruling, the judge criticized prosecutor­s for appearing to ignore the alleged wrongdoing­s of Antifia and far-left groups during protests that erupted in April 2017.

“While the allegation­s against Defendants may well be true, defendants offer considerab­le evidence that members of Antifa and related far-left groups did the same, if not worse, at those same political rallies,” Carney wrote in his ruling.

The judge specifical­ly noted concerns about left-leaning protesters injuring innocent civilians, adding that “such selective prosecutio­n leaves the troubling impression that the government believes speech on the left more deserving of protection than speech on the right.”

Rundo and Boman were indicted in 2018 with multiple charges in a series of clashes across California a year earlier.

The violent encounters included dueling protests between supporters of then-President Donald Trump and others at a “Patriots Day” in April 2017 in Berkeley. Among the groups allegedly involved in the clashes was the Rise Above Movement, which federal prosecutor­s say has espoused a white supremacis­t ideology and was co-founded by Rundo.

Carney's ruling on Wednesday touched off a flurry of legal motions after Rundo was temporaril­y released from custody. Federal prosecutor­s — who were concerned that Rundo may flee the country and had already traveled near the Mexico border — successful­ly argued to have him once again arrested while the appeals process plays out.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States