Prosecutors presented video testimony from some Somali immigrants who were the targets of the bombing
The plot was foiled after another militia member alerted authorities
WICHITA, US: Three militia members convicted of taking part in a foiled
plot to massacre Muslims in southwest Kansas were sentenced Friday to
decades in prison during an emotional court hearing in which one of the
targeted victims pleaded: “Please don’t hate us.”
US District Judge Eric Melgren sentenced Patrick Stein, the alleged
ringleader, to 30 years in prison and Curtis Allen, who drafted a
manifesto for the group, to 25 years. Gavin Wright, who authorities said
helped make and test explosives at his mobile home business, received
26 years. The plot was foiled after another militia member alerted
authorities.
Melgren dismissed defense attorneys’ request that he take into the
account the divisive political atmosphere in which the men formed their
plot to blow up a mosque and apartments housing Somali immigrants in the
meatpacking town Garden City, about 220 miles (355 kilometers) west of
Wichita, on the day after the 2016 election.
“We have extremely divisive elections because our system is to resolve those through elections and not violence,” Melgren said.
Stein’s attorneys have argued that he believed then-President Barack
Obama would declare martial law and not recognize the validity of the
election if Donald Trump won, forcing militias to step in. Stein’s
attorneys noted that during the 2016 campaign, all three men read and
shared Russian propaganda on their Facebook feed designed to sow discord
in the US political system.
Attorney Jim Pratt told the judge that for years Stein had immersed
himself in right-wing media and commentators, who normalized hate. But
Melgren was openly skeptical, telling Pratt: “Millions of people listen
to this stuff — whether it comes from the left or the right.”
Prosecutors presented video testimony from some Somali immigrants who
were the targets of the bombing. In one clip, Ifrah Farah pleaded:
“Please don’t kill us. Please don’t hate us. We can’t hurt you.”
Allen, 51, choked up as he addressed the judge, prompting his attorney
to step in and finish reading a prepared statement in which Allen
offered “my sincere apologies” to anyone who was frightened and asked
for their forgiveness. But Stein, 49, apologized only to his family and
friends, and the judge noted when sentencing him that, unlike Allen, he
had shown no remorse.
Wright, 53, apologized to the court, saying the plot is “not who I am.”
He also apologized to the immigrants who lived at the apartment complex.
The judge later said Wright’s courtroom statement showed he was still
in denial about what he did, adding and he did not buy that there was
any remorse on Wright’s part.
Melgren sentenced Stein to 30 years for conspiracy to use a weapon of
mass destruction and 10 years for conspiracy against civil rights. He
sentenced Allen and Wright to 25 years for conspiracy to use a weapon of
mass destruction and 10 years for conspiracy against civil rights.
Those sentences will run concurrently. Wright also got an additional
year to be served consecutively for lying to law enforcement, bringing
his total sentence to 26 years.
The judge told all three men that the planned attack was worse than the
Oklahoma City bombing because the Garden City plot was motivated by
hatreds of race, religion and national origin.
The Kansas plot was thwarted when militia member Dan Day tipped off
authorities to escalating threats of violence. He testified at the men’s
trial last year that Stein started recruiting others to kill Muslim
immigrants after the June 2016 mass shooting at the Pulse nightclub in
Orlando, Florida, by a gunman who had pledged allegiance to the Daesh
group.
Recordings that prosecutors played for jurors last April portrayed a
damning picture of a splinter group of the militia Kansas Security Force
that came to be known as “the Crusaders.”
Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker in a news release called the
sentences “a significant victory against hate crimes and domestic
terrorism.”
“These defendants planned to ruthlessly bomb an apartment complex and
kill innocent people, simply because of who they are and how they
worship,” FBI Director Christopher Wray said.
The sentencing hearings for the men came a day after two members of an
Illinois militia known as the White Rabbits pleaded guilty in the 2017
bombing of a Minnesota mosque , admitting they hoped the attack would
scare Muslims into leaving the US No one was injured in that attack.
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/53018
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>
Comments
Post a Comment