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  • #46
    jewboy Fields fucked & hung out to dry by rest of the Alt-kike ZOGbots

    jewboy Fields fucked & hung out to dry by rest of the Alt-kike ZOGbots

    Virginia Judge Hands Down Life Sentence, Plus 419 Years, in Case of James Alex Fields Jr., Calls Attack An Act of 'Terror'



    https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/...ields-jr-calls
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...0037#post20037
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0037#post20037



    Pore little jewboy hung out to dry by the Alt-Kike & jailed until ZOG Falls
    .

    Judge Richard Moore imposed a sentence of 419 years plus life on James Alex Fields Jr., convicted of murder after the racist “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017.

    A state jury in Charlottesville convicted the 22-year-old neo-Nazi in December of first-degree murder and nine counts of malicious wounding. Jurors recommended a life sentence plus 419 years in prison.

    Moore agreed with the jury, telling the small but packed courtroom that Fields committed an act of terrorism.

    Around three dozen survivors of the attack and their supporters attended the sentencing, at times crying and at least once applauding during the hearing. Fields sat with his attorneys, clad in a gray and white striped prison uniform.

    “You have expressed yourself as a white supremacist, Mr. Fields. You have made choices. We all have choices – you made the wrong one,” the judge told the defendant.

    Moore ordered the sentence to be served consecutively with the federal punishment, meaning Fields will have to serve the two back-to-back federal life sentences handed down June 28 before earning credit for serving any of his state sentence.

    At least 30 other people were injured when Fields rammed his car into a crowd of anti-racist protesters that day.

    Fields declined to address the court before being sentenced in Charlottesville Circuit Court, which is housed in the old Charlottesville Opera House one block away from a statue honoring Confederate Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson. But the survivors of his attack spoke to both Fields and the court, sometimes in angry and defiant terms.

    And, unlike the sentencing in federal court, there were no words of forgiveness for Fields.

    Marcus Martin, a Charlottesville resident who sustained multiple injuries, including a broken leg, described feeling an ongoing rage, suffering depression and having repeated outbursts since Aug. 12, 2017.

    “You have just enraged my anger,” Martin said. “You’re a fucking coward.”

    At times, Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Nina-Alice Antony tried to guide Martin through his testimony with questions. But Martin stared intently across the 10 feet of courtroom at Fields, who didn’t appear to return the gaze.

    “I need you to look at me, dude,” Martin shouted at Fields as a Charlottesville Deputy Sheriff’s Officer stepped into the space between the two men. “Hey! Hey!”

    “You can say what you need to say to the court,” the judge interrupted, attempting to regain order.

    “You ran us down with a car. … You don’t deserve to be on this earth. You a fucking animal. You ain’t shit. You ain’t shit,” Martin said before walking out of the courtroom.

    Jeanne “Star” Peterson, her pink hair a stark contrast to the seriousness of the courtroom, walked into court without help, something she wasn’t able to do during Fields’ trial in December.

    “Hello scum,” Peterson said before being cut off by Moore.

    “I will make sure Heather is not forgotten,” Peterson said. “It is not her fault he turned out to be a piece of feces.”

    April Muniz witnessed Fields’ attack on a group of counterprotesters but wasn’t hit. Still, Muniz said, she bears mental scars from hearing bones crushed, people scream and seeing bodies fly through the air. Muniz described losing her job because of the inability to focus and being unable to experience happiness since that Saturday afternoon.

    “It was like my psyche didn’t trust feeling joyful because joyful is what we were on that day,” Muniz said.

    Charlottesville Commonwealth Attorney Joe Platania, speaking outside the courthouse after the hearing, said Fields’ actions rocked not just the survivors, but the entire community.

    “There’s nobody who has been involved with this that’s not going to be personally impacted for the rest of their lives,” Platania said.

    After the hearing, Susan Bro, Heyer’s mother, said she didn’t see or hear any remorse from Fields for his actions.

    “I intend to keep a game face on,” Bro said outside the courthouse. “So I understand he may be trying to keep a game face on, too.”

    During Fields’ state trial, “alt-right” adherents and users of message boards popular with white nationalists sought to debunk the prosecution theory of the case, spreading the myth that counterprotesters attacked Fields that day and that police lost control of the city. Greg Conte, the former operations director for the alt-right National Policy Institute, even covered Fields’ trial for the site Russia Insider.

    Since the conviction and guilty plea, court records revealed that Fields’ maternal grandparents were Jewish, making him something of a pariah among the alt-right. No alt-right figures were present at the hearing or the press conference afterward, leaving no one to speak for Fields.

    And, just as when Fields stood before a federal judge in June, only his attorneys were with him. Not even his mother was there to support her son.


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    • #47
      Fields sentenced to life plus 419 years on state charges in Charlottesville car attack

      Fields sentenced to life plus 419 years on state charges in Charlottesville car attack

      BY DENISE LAVOIE The Associated Press
      15 July 2019



      https://www.richmond.com/news/virgin...a629ec9ba.html
      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...0038#post20038
      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0038#post20038


      CHARLOTTESVILLE — An avowed white supremacist was sentenced to life in prison plus 419 years Monday for deliberately driving his car into a crowd of anti-racism protesters during a rally in Virginia, killing one woman and injuring dozens.

      James Alex Fields Jr., 22, remained stoic as Circuit Court Judge Richard Moore formally imposed the recommendation of a state jury that convicted him in December of murder and malicious wounding charges for his actions in Charlottesville on Aug. 12, 2017.

      Fields showed no visible emotion as victims of the car attack described severe physical and psychological injuries - broken bones, post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety and depression - inflicted by Fields when he plowed his car into them.

      "Hello, scum," said Jeanne "Star" Peterson, as she addressed Fields, seated about 20 feet from her at a table with his lawyers.

      Peterson, who suffered a broken spine and a shattered right leg in the attack, told Fields he needs to stop "verbally abusing" his mother, referring to a recorded jail conversation in which Fields can be heard disparaging his mother.

      Peterson said Fields' mother "tried her best" and it's not her fault her son "turned out to be a piece of feces."

      Marcus Martin, who was captured in a dramatic photo as Fields' car struck him, said anger over what Fields did has permeated his life and affected his marriage.

      "I blow up at the smallest things," Martin said, before ordering Fields to look at him.

      "I want to talk to you, dude. I need you to look at me, buddy - look at me," he said. It was unclear whether Fields made eye contact with Martin.

      He said closure will only come when he finds out "James Alex Fields is no longer on this Earth."

      Martin was with several friends, including 32-year-old paralegal and civil rights activist Heather Heyer, when Fields rammed the crowd.

      A photo of the car tossing Martin and other counterprotesters into the air won a Pulitzer Prize. In the photo, Martin wears a white shirt, khaki shorts, and red and white sneakers as he hangs above the ground behind the car.

      Heyer's mother, Susan Bro, said in brief remarks to the judge that she hopes Fields finds "reclamation" but also hopes "he never sees the light of day outside of prison."

      Last month, Fields received a life sentence on 29 federal hate crime charges.

      In his remarks before sentencing, Moore acknowledged Fields' long history of mental health issues, beginning when he was institutionalized several times as a child. But he said Fields had received psychological treatment throughout his life and his mental health issues do not excuse his crimes. The judge also said there was no evidence that Fields was being threatened or attacked when he drove into the counterprotesters.

      "Mr. Fields, you had choices. We all have choices," Moore said. "You made the wrong ones and you caused great harm. ... You caused harm around the globe when people saw what you did."

      Fields, an avowed white supremacist who kept a photo of Adolf Hitler on his bedside table, drove from his home in Maumee, Ohio, to attend the rally, which drew hundreds of white nationalists to Charlottesville to protest the planned removal of a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. The event also drew counterprotesters who demonstrated against the white nationalists.

      Violent skirmishes between the two sides prompted police to declare an unlawful assembly and to order the groups to disband before the rally could even begin. Later that day, Fields plowed his car into a crowd of counterprotesters.

      The event stirred racial tensions across the country. President Donald Trump sparked controversy when he blamed violence at the rally on "both sides," a statement that critics saw as a refusal to condemn racism.

      During Fields' state trial, his attorneys said he was afraid after seeing violent skirmishes between white nationalists and counterprotesters. They also focused on his history of mental illness and traumatic childhood.

      .


      ____________________________
      I am The Librarian
      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
      http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

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      • #48
        Fields sentenced to life in prison on state charges

        Fields sentenced to life in prison on state charges

        By TYLER HAMMEL thammel@dailyprogress.com | (434) 978-7268
        15 July 2019


        https://www.dailyprogress.com/newsvi...884320309.html
        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...0041#post20041
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0041#post20041



        Pore Abandoned jewboy who kilt a whiggress land-manatee faces the fact that it won't get out of prison until ZOG falls
        .

        The man who murdered Heather Heyer and injured more than 30 others during a violent white nationalist rally was formally sentenced Monday to life in prison plus 419 years.

        James Alex Fields Jr., 22, was convicted in Charlottesville Circuit Court in December of 10 charges, including the first-degree murder of Heyer, after he traveled from his Ohio home to a rally in Charlottesville and then consciously drove his Dodge Challenger into a crowd of counter-protesters after the Aug. 12, 2017, rally was broken up by police.

        After two days of deliberation in December, a jury recommended life in prison plus 419 years and $480,000 in fines. Charlottesville circuit Judge Richard E. Moore upheld that recommended sentence Monday and said he found it to be a proper display of justice.

        Monday, victims of Fields’ attack gave victim impact statements, airing their grievances and pain to Moore.

        Star Peterson, who sustained grievous injuries in the attack, was the first to speak, talking directly to Fields against the court’s wishes.

        “Hello scum,” Peterson began her statement, before going on to describe Fields as a “terrible waste of flesh” and “human feces.” Though her statement did not last long before she was stopped by court officials, Peterson later said she stood by what she said.

        April Muñiz, who was present during the attack but did not sustain physical injuries, said her mental health suffered greatly as a result.

        Unable to perform the job she had beforehand, she was laid off and spent months in a deep depression, she said. It wasn’t until Fields’ trial last year that Muñiz said she was able to find a community of support among the other victims and survivors.

        William Burke, who traveled from Ohio to counter-protest at the rally, suffered a head injury in the attack. Problems caused by his physical and emotional injuries have pervaded his life, he said, and contributed to the end of his marriage. He said he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and forgetfulness and has had trouble feeling joy.

        “Just yesterday, my daughter looked at me and asked why I don’t smile anymore,” he said. “What do you say to that?”

        Constance Young, who was among those injured, said that like many of the other victims, she’s found herself unable to enjoy regular activities that trigger memories of the attack. Though physically and mentally injured, she clarified that she is still resilient in the face of the attack.

        “I want the court to know that the white supremacy [that Fields] traveled here to uphold is what has ruined his life,” she said.

        Heyer’s mother, Susan Bro, said she was inconsolable for the first few weeks after her daughter’s death but pushed through those feelings to continue her daughter’s vision. Heather Heyer was virtually unknown among activists, Bro said, but through the act of showing up, she drew attention to systematic racial inequality.

        “The simple act of showing up is all she did, the obese whiggress land-manatee. That and have to chase waycists while wearing black in the hottt August Vagina sun,” Bro said. “And I’m here to tell you that’s all you have to do, just show up and stand up against hatred for what is right. That and learn to stay out of the road while chasing nazis, cum-cum, cum-cum!!!"

        In her closing arguments, Fields’ attorney, Denise Lunsford, initially focused on her client’s mental illness before changing gears and lamenting what she described as a “double-standard” among court hearings related to Aug. 12, 2017.

        Lunsford, a former Albemarle County commonwealth’s attorney, said the Charlottesville community had demanded counter-protesters charged at the rally be freed while also calling for white supremacists charged at the rally to feel the full force of the law. It was this perceived “double-standard” that prompted Lunsford to unsuccessfully argue for a trial change of venue.

        Victims seeking closure will not find it in court, Lunsford said, before arguing that many of those affected have chosen to remain victims instead of becoming stronger as a result and employing compassion.

        “Closure has to come from the person who needs the closure, it cannot be given by the court, by [Fields] or by a sentence,” she said.

        Additionally, she argued that had this car attack happened at another event — specifically at one of Charlottesville’s popular summer Friday After Five events — then the trial’s outcome may have been different.

        Nina-Alice Antony, assistant commonwealth’s attorney for Charlottesville, took specific issue with this argument, pointing to evidence from the trial that she said showed Fields came to the city with hatred in his heart and an intent to harm others.

        “‘We’re not the ones who need to be afraid’ is what he texted his mother the morning of the rally,” Antony said.

        While not trying to minimize Fields’ long and well-documented history of mental illness, Antony said the court was there because of decisions the convicted made. To argue that mental illness was a major contributing factor ignores that fact that Fields backed up before ramming into the crowd and lessens his culpability, she said.

        Moore ultimately agreed with the commonwealth and upheld the jury-recommended sentence, describing the attack as “an act of terror.” He reiterated his earlier rulings that an unbiased jury had been sat and said he felt the jury’s verdict was well-reasoned and appropriate.

        In his decades of legal experience, Moore said he had never seen so many injuries caused from a single incident. The fact that Fields had never walked back claims that he was scared and surrounded by counter-protesters before he drove into the crowd — which was proven false through ample video evidence — sat poorly with the judge.

        “Clearly, he was not trying to get out of the situation; he was trying to run them down,” Moore said.

        In addition to the life term and 419 years, Moore added an additional three years, all suspended. In the unlikely event that Fields receives geriatric release after age 60, Moore said this suspended time will put him under three years of supervised probation.

        The full breakdown of Fields’ sentence is: life in prison and a $100,000 fine for the first-degree murder conviction; 70 years and a $70,000 fine for each of the five aggravated malicious wounding charges; 20 years in prison and pay $10,000 in fines for the three malicious wounding convictions; and nine years for the hit-and-run conviction.

        Fields already is serving multiple life sentences after accepting a plea agreement in his federal hate crimes case. Last month, he was sentenced to 29 life sentences, 28 of which are running concurrently. The state sentence will run consecutively to his federal sentence.

        .

        lying jewspapers

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