Truth and Consequences
Patrik Mathews, (RCMP Manitoba/Reuters) |
"I did not hear any particular apology to our country. to me, it's galling to think someone who's not an American would know better than us what kind of country we should have here and decide that you hate America so much you're going to infiltrate our country and tear it down.""In the letter you submitted, you didn't necessarily inspire confidence that you've changed to the point that there's no longer a threat of violence from you.""Nevertheless, you have stated that all you want to do is go back to Canada and live a normal life. We all hope that is something that will happen once you serve this sentence.""[...Conversations, text exchanges and planning represented more than merely] wishes and hopes and far-flung fantasies [of a pair of] wide-eyed neophytes.""They were specific, serious and calculating in the actions they intended to perpetrate."District Court Judge Theodore Chuang, Greenbelt, Maryland, U.S.
Nine
years in prison for former Canadian Armed Forces reservist Patrik
Mathews, 28, for his role in a plot to exploit escalating U.S. social
tensions in the hopes of triggering a "race war", in the assessment of
the FBI. A resident of Beausejour in Manitoba, he excused himself for
his ill judgement when "I got involved with the wrong people".
As though the choice to connect himself with the white supremacist
group The Base was an incidental error for which he was not seriously at
fault. He had no idea, he claimed, of the depth and seriousness of
their intended actions.
Judge
Chuang, after reviewing all the evidence presented to him, and
carefully reading through the letter submitted by Patrik Mathews
exonerating himself and blaming a misunderstanding on his part, took due
consideration of both the defence and the prosecution positions on the
punishment to be meted out to the terror-by-accidental-affiliation
chastened man who was, he claimed, innocent of any intent to carry out
any acts of violence.
Apart
from the sentence of 9 years in prison for his lapse in judgement,
there is an additional penalty of three years of supervised release once
his prison term is completed. And when justice has been served, he will
be deported back to Canada. Both Matthews and his co-defenant, U.S.
army veteran Brian Mark Lemley Jr., pleaded guilty to weapons charges
associated with the plot to precipitate a clash between police and
thousands of heavily armed gun control protesters, in Richmond,
Virginia..
In August 2019, Brian Lemley and William Bilbrough attended a training camp for neo-Nazi group The Base. Lemley is standing second from left, holding a long gun in the air. Bilbrough is kneeling in the centre while holding a blade. (U.S. Attorney detention memo) |
The
defence had petitioned the court for location to a prison facility in
Minnesota so their client would be located closer to his family in
Manitoba. Originally, he informed the court he believed The Base was
committed to ideals that were less extreme, focusing on immigration
controls. He characterized the work of The Base as "horrifically and disastrously wrong", though it might have been seen by him to be good, clean fun at the time.
He
could have been given a sentence up to 25 years in prison, in
reflection of the "terrorism enhancement" provision requested by the
prosecution. On the other hand, the defense counsel argued a sentence of
less than three years, for after all the defendants' plan ultimately
was never carried out. Contrastingly, his crimes, prosecutors argued,
were serious and his motives even more so.
During a search of the apartment Mathews shared with one of the co-accused, law enforcement agents found videos of Mathews saying violent, anti-Semitic and racist things. (U.S. Attorney detention memo) |
Court
had been presented with ample evidence of the plot unfolding, where the
two spoke in terms of killing federal officials, derailing trains and
poisoning water supplies; all part of a violent scheme to disrupt and
exploit political and social tensions in the hopes of triggering a race
war in the U.S. Another co-defendant, William Garfield Bilbrough IV,
also pleaded guilty to assisting Mathews to enter the U.S. illegally,
for which he was sentenced to five years in prison.
The
heavily incriminating evidence that came to light was gathered through
FBI wiretaps, "sneak-and-peek" warrants, and the cooperation of
undercover officers. As all too often happens in cases of this nature,
Patrik Mathews' father described his son as a man with a good heart but a
troubled soul, who had suffered as a child from being pushed around by
schoolyard bullies, resulting in an attitude of social alienation.
Mounties found this handwritten list of mass shootings when they executed a search warrant at Mathews' Beausejour, Man., residence in August 2019. The list included the year, number of people dead and whether the shooter was on medication. (U.S. prosecution sentencing memorandum) |
Labels: Incarceration, Justice, Neo Nazis, Plan to Destabilize America, Race War, The Base, Violence, White Imperialists
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