The Evening Leader

Jury awards $26M in damages from Unite the Right violence

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CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. (AP) — A jury ordered 17 white nationalis­t leaders and organizati­ons to pay more than $26 million in damages Tuesday over the violence that erupted during the deadly 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottes­ville in 2017.

After a nearly monthlong civil trial, the jury in U.S. District Court deadlocked on two key claims but found the white nationalis­ts liable on four other claims in the lawsuit filed by nine people who suffered physical or emotional injuries during the two days of demonstrat­ions.

Attorney Roberta Kaplan said the plaintiffs' lawyers plan to refile the suit so a new jury can decide the two deadlocked claims. She called the amount of damages awarded from the other counts “eye opening.”

"That sends a loud message,” Kaplan said.

The verdict, though mixed, is a rebuke to the white nationalis­t movement, particular­ly for the two dozen individual­s and organizati­ons accused in a federal lawsuit of orchestrat­ing violence against African Americans, Jews and others in a meticulous­ly planned conspiracy.

White nationalis­t leader Richard Spencer vowed to appeal, saying the “entire theory of that verdict is fundamenta­lly flawed.”

He said plaintiffs’ attorneys made it clear before the trial that they wanted to use the case to bankrupt him and other defendants.

“It was activism by means of lawsuits, and that is absolutely outrageous,” he said. “I’m doing fine right now because I had kind of accepted in my heart the worst that could happen. I had hope, of course, but I’m not terribly surprised or crestfalle­n.”

Jurors were unable to reach unanimous verdicts on two pivotal claims based on a 150-yearold federal law passed after the

Civil War to shield freed slaves from violence and protect their civil rights. The Ku Klux Klan Act contains a rarely used provision that allows private citizens to sue other citizens for civil rights violations.

Under those claims, the plaintiffs asked the jury to find that the defendants engaged in a conspiracy to commit racially motivated violence and that they knew about the conspiracy but failed to stop it from being carried out. Jurors could not agree on those claims.

The jury did find the defendants liable under a Virginia state law conspiracy claim and awarded $11 million in damages to the plaintiffs under that claim. Jurors also found five of the main organizers of the rally liable under a claim that alleged they subjected two of the plaintiffs to intimidati­on, harassment or violence that was motivated by racial, religious or ethnic animosity. The jury awarded the plaintiffs $1.5 million in damages on that claim.

The final two claims were made against James Alex Fields Jr., an avowed Hitler admirer who intentiona­lly drove his car into a crowd of counterpro­testers, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring 19 others. The jury found Fields, who is serving life in prison for murder and hate crimes, liable on an assault or battery claim and awarded six plaintiffs just under $6.8 million in damages. The jury awarded the same plaintiffs nearly $6.7 million on a claim that Fields intentiona­lly inflicted emotional distress on them.

Heyer's mother, Susan Bro, said the verdict “sends a very clear message that hate speech put into action has consequenc­es.”

“The defendants were convicted with their own words that showed months of planning went into the rally. This was not a spontaneou­s event," said Bro, who was not a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

Hundreds of white nationalis­ts descended on Charlottes­ville for the Unite the Right rally on Aug. 11 and 12, 2017, ostensibly to protest city plans to remove a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee. During a march on the University of Virginia campus, white nationalis­ts chanted “Jews will not replace us,” surrounded counterpro­testers and threw tiki torches at them.

Then-President Donald Trump touched off a political firestorm when he failed to immediatel­y denounce the white nationalis­ts, saying there were “very fine people on both sides. ”

The lawsuit funded by Integrity First for America, a nonprofit civil rights organizati­on formed in response to the violence in Charlottes­ville, accused some of the country’s most well-known white nationalis­ts of plotting the violence, including Jason Kessler, the rally’s main organizer; Spencer, who coined the term “alt-right” to describe a loosely connected band of white nationalis­ts, neo-Nazis and others; and Christophe­r Cantwell, a white supremacis­t who became known as the “crying Nazi” for posting a tearful video when a warrant was issued for his arrest on assault charges for using pepper spray against counterdem­onstrators.

Joshua Smith, an attorney for defendants Matthew Heimbach, Matthew Parrott and the far-right Traditiona­list Worker Party, said he will ask the court to reduce the punitive damages awards against his clients under U.S. Supreme Court precedent that places limitation­s on how much larger punitive damages can be than compensato­ry damages.

Smith described the verdict as a “big win” for his clients due to the relatively modest amount of compensato­ry damages awarded by the jury.

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