Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Britain killing suspect refuses to state name

Accused to have psychiatri­c tests

- By GREGORY KATZ

LONDON — The man accused of a murder that has brought campaignin­g in the country’s European Union referendum to a standstill turned his first court appearance Saturday into a chilling spectacle by refusing to state his real identity.

Asked his name in Westminste­r Magistrate’s Court, Thomas Mair said: “My name is death to traitors, freedom for Britain.”

The 52-year-old Mair, accused of murdering British Labour Party lawmaker Jo Cox, also refused to reveal his address or his date of birth.

His bizarre performanc­e prompted Deputy Chief Magistrate Emma Arbuthnot to order a psychiatri­c report into Mair’s mental state that may influence how the case against him proceeds.

The comments also raised questions about his possible motive for the crime. Once a suspect is charged, British law restricts what can be published about the case to ensure the right to a fair trial is not compromise­d.

Mair is accused of using a dagger and a handgun to kill Cox after she got out of her car for a meeting with constituen­ts Thursday in the small town of Birstall in northern England.

She was actively backing the campaign to keep Britain inside the European Union’s hard-fought referendum, set for Thursday, and had also advocated better treatment for Syrian refugees, particular­ly children.

In her political views and in her aid work, she had embraced the value of having a multicultu­ral Britain, a stance that is unpopular with some Britons.

Britain has been in mourning since her death, which made her the first sitting lawmaker killed in Britain in a quarter century. Vigils were held in dozens of towns and cities, and flags have been lowered on many official buildings.

Both sides in the referendum campaign shut down campaignin­g within hours of her death, with major rallies and speeches canceled or postponed. Some low-level campaignin­g, including the distributi­on of leaflets, has returned and the “leave” campaign reactivate­d its Twitter account on Saturday.

Analysts predict the harsh rhetoric of the campaign may be toned down in its final days in part because of the broad sense of revulsion that swept Britain after the killing of a popular politician who left behind a husband and two young children.

Cox’s sister, Kim Leadbeater, and other family members made an emotional visit to the town center in Birstall on Saturday to view the many floral tributes left to the slain member of Parliament. They hugged many who had gathered to pay tribute to Cox.

“For now, our family is broken, but it will mend in time and we will never let Jo leave our lives,” said Leadbeater. She said her sister would live on through her husband Brendan and “through her truly wonderful children, who will always know what an utterly amazing woman their mother was.”

The emotional response to Cox’s death, and the halt in campaignin­g, has shifted the public focus away from the debate over immigratio­n and economics that had characteri­zed media coverage of the referendum.

Instead, there is reflection on a political culture that seems to have lost its way in a blaze of charge and countercha­rge.

 ?? ELIZABETH COOK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A courtroom sketch shows Thomas Mair, center, appearing Saturday at Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court in London. Mair, 52, is charged in the Thursday slaying of Labour Party lawmaker Jo Cox.
ELIZABETH COOK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A courtroom sketch shows Thomas Mair, center, appearing Saturday at Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court in London. Mair, 52, is charged in the Thursday slaying of Labour Party lawmaker Jo Cox.

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