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Split decision: Shooter gets bond, alleged assailant doesn’t

 

Two ponytailed Unite the Right participants represented by the same Blairs, Virginia-based lawyer had different fates in their January 4 bond hearings in Charlottesville Circuit Court.

Judge Humes Franklin granted 52-year-old Baltimore resident Richard Preston, an imperial wizard of the Confederate White Knights of the KKK who was filmed firing a gun during the August 12 Unite the Right rally, a $50,000 cash bond with the instruction to not leave the state, possess a firearm or “engage in any assemblies, if you will.”

Defense attorney Elmer Woodard called on Billy Snuffer Sr., the imperial wizard of the Rebel Brigade Knights of the True Invisible Empire, who testified he had a “trailer down on the farm” in Martinsville, where he would allow Preston to live pending his three-day trial in May.

Snuffer, who told the judge he owns Snuffer’s Auto Repair in Buchanan, offered to give Preston a job while out on bond, but it is unclear whether the judge will allow Preston to leave the trailer for matters other than court and to meet with his attorney, who also represents several other white nationalists, including “Crying Nazi” Chris Cantwell.

In a separate hearing on the same day, Jacob Goodwin, a 22-year-old from Arkansas who allegedly participated in the Market Street Parking Garage beatdown of DeAndre Harris, was denied his shot at getting out of jail.

Goodwin, wearing all-black clothing, black goggles, a helmet and carrying a shield on August 12, can be identified in widely circulated videos of the attack, but Woodard told the judge his client was simply walking to his car in the garage when he encountered two groups of people “exercising their First Amendment rights with great vigor,” and unintentionally became involved in the scuffle.

“I was walking and DeAndre Harris come sprinting at me,” Goodwin testified. “He come at me, kind of bounced off my shield and I kicked him.”

On a small scrap of paper, Woodard offered to the judge an address apparently near Richmond where a friend identified by the prosecution as Eric Davis had invited Goodwin to live, if granted bond.

When Franklin asked how long Goodwin had known the Central Virginia resident, the Arkansas man first said four months, but quickly changed his answer to about a year. No one could determine whether Goodwin’s friend, whom he said he met at a “political meeting” in Kentucky and roomed with in hotels, lived in a house or apartment near Richmond, or whether he has a criminal record.

As Franklin was in the process of denying the request for bond, Matthew Heimbach—a co-founder of the Traditionalist Worker Party and Holocaust denier often considered to be the face of a new generation of white nationalists—approached the defense and whispered for several seconds before a deputy ordered him to sit down.

“Apparently someone in the courtroom has the answer to your questions,” interjected Woodard, but the ruling had already been made, Heimbach had already retaken his seat next to Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler and Franklin said he was done with that hearing for the day.

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Murder charge: James Fields in court

Two days after he plowed into a group of peaceful counterprotesters with his car, white nationalist James Alex Fields Jr. appeared via webcam in Charlottesville General District Court Monday morning.

The Maumee, Ohio, man, 20, is charged with second-degree murder, three counts of malicious wounding and a hit-and-run for driving his Dodge Challenger down Fourth Street in the aftermath of the August 12 Unite the Right rally. He struck about two dozen people, killing 32-year-old local activist Heather Heyer and injuring 19 others.

Fields told Judge Robert Downer he couldn’t afford his own attorney and was appointed Charles “Buddy” Weber, who also represented rally organizer Jason Kessler earlier this year in a misdemeanor assault conviction for punching a man on the Downtown Mall while collecting signatures for his remove-Vice-Mayor-Wes-Bellamy-from-office petition.

Fields’ face appeared on the courtroom’s TV screen from the local jail for several minutes before the judge entered the courtroom. He kept his head down.

Photos from the rally show Fields standing with members of Vanguard America, but the white supremacist group disavowed any association with him.

James Fields is in the background holding a shield to the right of organizer Eli Mosley, center, with Vanguard Americas, who say he’s not with them. Photo Eze Amos

Fields’ former high school social studies teacher, Derek Weimer, told CNN that Fields had “outlandish, very radical beliefs,” when he taught him at Randall K. Cooper High School in Union, Kentucky.

“It was quite clear he had some really extreme views and maybe a little bit of anger behind them,” Weimer told the Atlanta-based station. “He really bought into this white supremacist thing. He was very big into Nazism. He really had a fondness for Adolf Hitler.”

And the Washington Post reports that in 2010, his mother, Samantha Bloom, said he struck her in the head, put his hands over her mouth and threatened to beat her after she told him to stop playing video games. She said he was taking medication to control his temper.

In another instance in October 2011, Bloom, who uses a wheelchair, allegedly called 911 to say her son was threatening her and she didn’t feel in control of the situation, according to the Post. The next month, an unknown caller asked police to come to the house because Bloom wanted Fields to be assessed at the hospital, but was too afraid to take him. The caller said he had just spit in her face and stood behind her with a 12-inch knife the night before.

After Fields’ August 14 court appearance, Traditionalist Worker Party founder Matthew Heimbach, who was scheduled to speak at the Unite the Right rally, defended him outside the courthouse.

“We have seen the pictures and the video of bats coming at that vehicle as a 20-year-old man feared for his life,” Heimbach said. “[Counterprotesters] came prepared for war. They tried to kill us.”

And moments earlier, “The nationalist community defended ourselves against thugs in a battle that was brought by this city that wanted a bloodbath.”

Fields’ next court appearance is scheduled for August 25.