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‘Unfortunate outcome:’ Kessler perjury charge tossed

 

Jason Kessler didn’t waste any time addressing the media outside the courthouse March 20 when a judge abruptly dismissed a perjury charge against him during the trial.

“[Robert] Tracci is trying to do a political hit job,” he said to the cameras and microphones, adding that he and other attendees of August 12 rally he organized, including “Crying Nazi” Christopher Cantwell, have been targeted by the Albemarle commonwealth’s attorney. “This was an attempt to undermine my credibility so I can’t testify about the city of Charlottesville and their sabotage of that rally that got people hurt. And no one on any side should have gotten hurt.”

Kessler was accused of lying under oath at the local magistrate’s office following a January 2017 altercation with another man on the Downtown Mall. Defense attorney Mike Hallahan made a motion to strike the charge against his client immediately after resting his case, arguing that the prosecutor did not prove that the alleged crime took place in Albemarle County, and that the burden to establish venue is on the commonwealth.

Tracci, who could be heard asking his legal team if they had “any ideas” just minutes before the discharge, made a brief statement outside the courthouse that he was “obviously disappointed,” and said in an email that his office is examining potential steps to take.

“We count on our commonwealth’s attorney to do the best job he can and sometimes it’s not enough,” said local attorney Timothy Read, who was observing the trial. He said the perjury charge can’t be brought against Kessler again because of double jeopardy. “I’m very surprised that it happened here in a case with this much attention. …I think it’s an unfortunate outcome.”

Local legal expert Dave Heilberg says that while all trial attorneys make blunders, the rookie mistake won’t bode well for Tracci in the next election.

“Head prosecutors who are mostly office administrators before showing up to grandstand for their big cases sometimes make these errors,” he says. “Voters don’t forget these unforgivable mistakes.”

The perjury charge stemmed from a Downtown Mall scuffle when Kessler asked passersby to sign a petition to remove then Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy from office for offensive tweets he made before being elected. Community members saw it as a racial attack when the right-wing blogger put his hit out on the only African-American city councilor, and Kessler testified that many people would curse him over their shoulder when he asked for their signature on his document.

But when Jay Taylor approached and took the petition from Kessler, reading it for a few moments and calling Kessler a “fucking asshole,” the man on trial for perjury said he perceived a threat.

Video evidence submitted in court showed Kessler slugging Taylor upside the head, but Kessler’s sworn statement to the magistrate at the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail was that Taylor had assaulted him first, by “violently shaking” his arm when he took the petition from Kessler and making “face to face” contact.

In the defense’s opening argument, Hallahan, who wore a long, pink tie, portrayed the result of Taylor’s alleged assaultive behavior by making a swing with his right arm and exclaiming, “BAM!”

Hallahan persisted that Kessler acted in self defense, and that his client’s written account of what happened, made under oath to a magistrate, was true. On the witness stand, Kessler admitted that “shaking,” wasn’t the best word to use and that the “face to face” contact he referred to consisted of Taylor standing about a foot away. In April, Kessler pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault of Taylor.

Jason Kessler addresses the media after flipping off a C-VILLE reporter and pleading guilty to assaulting Jay Taylor in April 2017. Staff photo

Tracci showed a Newsplex clip of Kessler being interviewed on the day of that guilty plea, in which he said, “Man to man, yell in a man’s face and expect to get punched in the face.”

During the perjury trial, Taylor testified he was walking on the mall with his dog and a cup of coffee when he saw Kessler, with whom he was acquainted, and asked to read the petition, even though he wasn’t a city voter.

Taylor said he realized that the petition wasn’t supposed to make anything better, that it was all about creating chaos, and that’s when he handed it back and called Kessler the expletive. After Taylor got clobbered, he said Kessler apologized, asked him not to call the cops and said he was just having a “bad day.”

“Yeah, I was having a bad day, clearly,” Kessler testified. “I try to be [a nice guy], [but] I don’t always succeed.”

It took nearly three hours to seat a jury of 10 men and three women out of a pool of 60 potential jurors, because more than a dozen told the judge that they were familiar with the organizer of the Unite the Right rally and Hallahan elected to individually interview them.

“I will admit that I have a preconceived idea about whether he committed perjury,” said one unnamed juror during her interview. “I believe he lied.”

She was dismissed. Another woman who was relieved of her duties said she knew Kessler as the guy who wanted to remove the city’s Confederate war memorials of General Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson.

“She might be the only person in Albemarle County who thinks Mr. Kessler wants to take the statue down,” said Hallahan after she left the room, and there was a brief moment of unity, where the defendant’s supporters and opponents shared one thing: a nervous giggle.

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Family closure: Sentence suspended for father who killed son

The former UVA police officer who killed his mentally ill son while defending his family last year won’t serve any additional jail time, an Albemarle County judge ruled December 5.

On November 9, 2016, then-84-year-old Donald Short shot his 47-year-old son, Matthew, in the leg and abdomen after Matthew started a violent fight with Short’s other son, Edward.

During the investigation, the elder Short told a detective that Matthew abused drugs and had been acting strange lately, so the former cop started carrying a gun with him for protection. Matthew had also tried to kill his brother before, Short said, so when the two were fighting and Edward was struggling to take Matthew to the ground, their father said he shot Matthew to immobilize him.

Matthew died three days later.

“My father didn’t shoot to kill Matthew,” testified Laura LaRose, the daughter of the 85-year-old, who entered an Alford plea to an involuntary manslaughter charge in August, admitting there was enough evidence to convict him, though he didn’t feel guilty of the crime.

LaRose continued, “[Short] tried to keep [Matthew] from hurting himself or someone else. Punishing my father would only accentuate the suffering for all of us.”

Emotions ran high in the courtroom as LaRose spoke of her familiarity with Matthew’s struggles, of the highs and lows of his mental health and his self-medication with “street drugs.”

Before his death, police were called to the Short residence three other times because Matthew was being violent, according to a statement of facts provided by the commonwealth’s attorney’s office.

The document also said that on the day of the shooting, residents of an apartment on Burgoyne Road called the police when a group of people, including Matthew, allegedly attempted to break into their apartment.

A female resident told police said she had gotten into an argument with “Crazy Matt” about drugs on November 7. He threatened her with an ax and said he’d “be back.”

He kept his promise. When he came back two days later, she said Matthew charged the door while saying he was “coming in by the hair of [his] chinny chin chin,” and holding a yellow and black ax and some rope.

The resident told police she knew Matthew, and that he “talked about killing people, talk[ed] to the lord, could see the devil and would go into a corner of a room, look up and say, ‘Do y’all see that?’” according to the statement of facts.

On the day of Short’s sentencing, his family filled the courtroom in support. Judge Cheryl Higgins called the incident a tragedy and said it’s time for them to begin to heal.

She sentenced Short to five years of jail time, with all but 10 days suspended, which he already served during the investigation.

Outside the courthouse, defense attorney Holly Vradenburgh asked reporters to respect the family and called for resources for people dealing with mental illness in loved ones.

“Their grief over the loss of Matthew was compounded by Don Short being arrested and charged with his murder,” she read from a statement. “This 84-year-old man who spent over 50 years of his life in law enforcement sat in a jail cell alone when he learned he had killed his son while protecting his other son.”

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Korte’s plea: Judge rebuffs offer, sends child porn case to another judge

Without expounding on why, Albemarle Circuit Court Judge Cheryl Higgins rejected a plea agreement from a former UVA professor and the prosecution November 14, and said the matter will be heard by a different judge.

Walter Korte, 74, who had a long and distinguished career at the University of Virginia as a film expert, faced two counts of possession of child pornography. The plea agreement was presented in court in August. At that time, Higgins expressed reservations about the plea, asked for a pre-sentencing report and wanted to see the two images for which Korte was charged.

The case started during the summer of 2016 when Korte disposed of his porn collection in a dumpster outside Bryan Hall, where UVA’s English department is housed. University police staked out the dumpster and observed him tossing plastic bags on a couple of occasions.

Most of the thousands of images were legal, adult porn, but among the adult fare were images of clothed and naked young males—and magazines with Korte’s home address, according to Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Amanda Galloway in court in August.

The prosecution sent questionable images to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which found one known child pornographic image. The state attorney general’s office determined that nearly 700 images were child erotica, which depicts no nudity or sexual activity and is legal. The ages for pubescent males in 16 images could not be determined, according to Galloway.

In the plea, the parties agreed that Korte, who has no criminal record, no hands-on victims and whom a psychological assessment determined was not a threat, would serve a maximum of 12 months in jail and register as a sex offender.

Galloway told the judge that if Korte had been convicted of one count, sentencing guidelines called for probation and no sex offender registry.

“The court is going to reject the plea,” and it will be assigned to another judge, said Higgins three months later.

The agreement was either too lenient—or too harsh, opines legal expert David Heilberg. “Judge Higgins wasn’t of a mind to accept it,” he says.

Heilberg says there are two types of plea agreements. A judge usually accepts a recommendation plea but is not bound to follow it.

“What Higgins rejected was an appropriate plea,” he surmises. That means the commonwealth and the defense agree on the appropriate way for the case to come out, and the court can accept or reject it, but can’t change it, he explains. “Judge Higgins must have felt it restricted her too much.”

Korte will get a new judge at the December 4 docket call.

 

Related links:

Plea postponed: Judge wants report, photos in Korte child porn possession case 

Invalid warrant: Judge allows evidence in Korte case anyway
UVA prof charged with child porn possession