Imperial Valley Press

White nationalis­t faces Capitol melee assault trial

- BY DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO — A purported white nationalis­t on Friday was ordered to stand trial on an assault charge from a 2016 melee at the California state Capitol that injured at least 14 people.

Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Sharon Lueras ruled that prosecutor­s have enough evidence to try William Scott Planer, 35, on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. Prosecutor­s dropped another charge of participat­ing in a riot.

Planer was among 20 members of the white-nationalis­t Traditiona­list Worker Party rallying at the Capitol in June 2016 when he knocked a defenseles­s counter-protester unconsciou­s, prosecutor­s said.

Defense attorney Danny Brace said Planer was defending himself and others from 200 to 300 counter-protesters, three of whom face charges in a separate case. He questioned why police didn’t do more to separate the two groups, criticism previously raised by independen­t observers who said police seemed slow to react.

At least 14 participan­ts su ered stab wounds, cuts and bruises, with two surviving critical stabbings. Police also recovered a loaded gun.

Separately, Planer was arrested in Colorado in July 2017 on suspicion of pasting stickers reading “Fight Terror, Nuke Israel” on the front door of a Colorado Springs Jewish center.

The Sacramento case against Planer rests on a social media video played in court Friday that shows counter-protester Alice Summers attempting to rise to her feet from the Capitol lawn. Planer runs up behind her and hits her in the head with a pole, using a full baseball bat-like swing. She drops unconsciou­s before three other counter-protesters drag her away.

“I do not see an issue of self-defense,” the judge said. “He comes up behind her and strikes her in the head.”

California Highway Patrol investigat­or Donovan Ayres testified on cross-examinatio­n that Summers was initially knocked down after starting and losing a fistfight with another member of the Traditiona­list Worker Party, which had a permit to rally at the Capitol.

Planer had the 2-by2-inch (5-by-5-millimeter) pole he used to strike Summers because he took it from another counter-protester who was using it to attack him, Ayres said. Counter-protesters also sprayed him with pepper spray before he struck Summers.

After striking Summers, Planer broke his stick over the head of another counter-protester who was attacking another white nationalis­t with a similar pole. He is not charged in that fight.

“They were outnumbere­d 10 to one,” Brace argued. “They had the right to protest, the right to defend themselves.”

Ayres testified that police knew for six to eight weeks that counter-protesters calling themselves anarchists, anti-fascists, socialists, communists, and a group called By Any Means Necessary planned to disrupt the rally, likely using violence.

 ?? PHOTO/RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? William Scott Planer (left) listens as his attorney, Danny Brace, addresses the court during a preliminar­y hearing into an assault charge he faces stemming from a 2016 melee at the state Capitol, in Sacramento County Superior Court, Friday in...
PHOTO/RICH PEDRONCELL­I William Scott Planer (left) listens as his attorney, Danny Brace, addresses the court during a preliminar­y hearing into an assault charge he faces stemming from a 2016 melee at the state Capitol, in Sacramento County Superior Court, Friday in...

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