San Francisco Chronicle

Agreement saves 17mile stretch of scenic Pacific Crest Trail.

- By Mitch Smith Mitch Smith is a New York Times writer.

James Fields Jr., the white supremacis­t who murdered a woman in 2017 when he steered his speeding car into a crowd of peaceful demonstrat­ors in Charlottes­ville, Va., was sentenced Friday to life in federal prison, the Associated Press reported.

Lawyers for Fields, 22, had asked for mercy, citing his difficult childhood and mental health problems. Prosecutor­s had sought the life sentence, arguing that Fields’ racist, antiSemiti­c beliefs motivated the decision to attend the white supremacis­t rally in Charlottes­ville and to attack counterpro­testers, killing Heather Heyer and injuring dozens of others.

“The defendant’s crimes were so horrendous — and the maiming of innocents so severe — that they outweigh any factors the defendant may argue form a basis for leniency,” federal prosecutor­s told the judge in a sentencing memo. “This is particular­ly true in light of the fact that he has demonstrat­ed that he feels no remorse for his actions and continues to espouse his hateful ideology.”

Fields was among hundreds of white supremacis­ts who swarmed Charlottes­ville in August 2017 for the “Unite the Right” rally, in which they shouted antiSemiti­c phrases, marched with tiki torches and attacked a racially diverse group of counterpro­testers. The rally appeared to be winding down when Fields drove his car into a crowd of those counterpro­testers.

The sheer number of white nationalis­ts who marched in Charlottes­ville, and President Trump’s assertion afterward that bad actors on “many sides” were to blame for the violence, led to a national reckoning on the ascendance of white supremacy and the threats it poses.

Heyer, 32, a paralegal, was known in Charlottes­ville as someone who spoke out when she saw injustice.

“Heather was a very strong woman” who stood up against “any type of discrimina­tion,” Alfred Wilson, a manager at the law firm where she worked, said shortly after her death. “That’s just how she’s always been.”

Fields pleaded guilty to 29 federal charges earlier this year, including a hate crime for Heyer’s death. Federal prosecutor­s dropped another charge that could have led to the death penalty.

When Fields pleaded guilty, Attorney General William Barr said in a statement that the hate crimes were “acts of domestic terrorism” and that prosecutin­g them was a priority for his office.

Fields’ lawyers asked the judge for a sentence that would allow him to eventually be released from prison. Fields had been trying to leave the rally to return home to Ohio, his lawyers said, but found the street blocked by counterpro­testers and made the splitsecon­d decision to drive through them.

“The essential property of mercy is that it applies to the undeservin­g,” his lawyers wrote in a sentencing memo, which cited Fields’ mental illness and relative youth as reasons for something less than a life term in prison.

Fields was convicted separately in state court of firstdegre­e murder in December, and jurors recommende­d a life sentence. A judge will decide in the coming weeks whether to accept that recommenda­tion.

 ??  ??
 ?? Matt Eich / New York Times 2017 ?? A crowd of activists in Charlottes­ville, Va., was driven into by James Fields Jr., killing Heather Heyer.
Matt Eich / New York Times 2017 A crowd of activists in Charlottes­ville, Va., was driven into by James Fields Jr., killing Heather Heyer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States