Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Georgia couple gets prison for racist threats at child's birthday party



A Georgia couple who rode with a Confederate flag-waving group that made armed threats against African-Americans at a child's birthday party were sentenced to prison Monday.

Jose "Joe" Torres, was sentenced to 20 years, with 13 years in prison, after a jury convicted him on three counts of aggravated assault, one count of making terroristic threats and one count of violating of Georgia's Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act.

Kayla Norton was sentenced to 15 years, with six years in prison. She was convicted on one count of making terroristic threats and one count of violation of the Street Gang Act.

"Many people tried to make the case about simply flying the Confederate Battle Flag," Douglas County District Attorney Brian Fortner said in a statement. "This case was about a group of people riding around our community, drinking alcohol, harassing and intimidating our citizens because of the color of their skin."

On July 25, 2015, Torres and Norton, joined about a dozen other people in a convoy of pickup trucks waving large Confederate flags as they drove around Douglas County, a suburban Atlanta community. Most of them belonged to a group called "Respect the Flag."[...]

The party-goers said the people in the trucks yelled racial slurs as they passed, the statement said.

The drivers parked the trucks near the house, prosecutors said. Torres was part of a smaller group that "threatened to kill the party goers while repeatedly using derogatory racial slurs against them," said the statement.

"Torres, who had retrieved a shotgun from his vehicle, pointed his shotgun at the group of African American party-goers and stated he was going to kill them while his co-defendants stated that 'the little ones can get one too,' referring to the young children at the party," the statement said.

Norton was accused of making similar threats. The victims said some member of Torres' group was armed with a knife and a tire tool.[...]

4 comments:

  1. Man oh man. Alcohol. Hatred. Peer pressure. Failure to admit guilt (other defendants pleaded guilty and got lesser terms). The judge sent a strong message. Others will hear and fear.

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  2. What a waste. Two lives ruined becuase of unncesary bigotry.

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  3. Two lives hopefully improved by having to spend some time reflecting on their misdeed.

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  4. Hopefully. But the problem is the prison system in general in the US (unllike in scandinavian countries) has a poor record of rehabilitation. They will probably find "protection" in a white-supremacist gang to protect them from non-white gangs, and this may only reinforce their flaws rather than correct them. But I hope I am wrong.

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