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Charge upgraded: First-degree murder, nine felonies from August 12 certified to grand jury

 

The scene December 14 at Charlottesville Circuit Court was like a flashback to August 12. A heavy police presence closed High Street outside the courthouse and barricades kept protesters from the man many consider the perp of the day’s fatal finale, Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler.

Photo Eze Amos

Inside the courtroom, more than 20 victims and family members, including Susan Bro, mother of Heather Heyer, filled three rows and faced the man accused of plowing into a crowd on Fourth Street and killing Heyer.

James Alex Fields, 20, entered the room shackled and in a gray-and-white prison jumpsuit, sporting a beard grown during the past four months in jail. Flanked by his attorneys, former Albemarle commonwealth’s attorney Denise Lunsford and James Hill, Fields mostly kept his eyes down, and occasionally made a note during the proceedings.

Security inside the courtroom put local reporters in the first two rows, and deputies refused to allow anyone to sit in the immediate rows behind them, creating a buffer around Fields and a lot of empty seats for a case with intense public interest.

And Kessler, who was called “murderer” as he entered the courthouse and who spoke to a TV camera during a break to denounce Charlottesville as “communist” and the proceedings as a “kangaroo court,” often had a row entirely to himself.

Most shocking for many in the courtroom was watching previously unseen videos of the Fields-driven 2010 Dodge Challenger flooring it into the counter demonstrators. The first shown was from a Virginia State Police helicopter piloted by Lieutenant Jay Cullen and Trooper Pilot Berke Bates, who died when their chopper crashed three hours later.

“Shit! Holy crap! Did you see that?” one of the pilots hovering above asked. “I can’t believe he did that.”

The helicopter video followed Fields as he backed up Fourth Street, dragging the Challenger’s front bumper, drove east on Market Street, turned right to drive across the Belmont Bridge and then turned left onto Monticello Avenue, where he stopped about a mile from the scene that left 36 people injured, according to the prosecution’s only witness, Charlottesville Police Detective Steven Young.

One of the victims, Ohio resident Bill Burke, who was hospitalized from his injuries, returned for the preliminary hearing and stared at Fields after the state police video of the crash.

Even more chilling was footage from Red Pump Kitchen, the Italian restaurant on the corner of the Downtown Mall and Fourth Street.

First are the vehicles that drove down Fourth Street, which was supposed to be closed: a maroon van, a black pickup truck and a ragtop white Camry, which were all stopped by the counterprotesters who had marched east on Water Street and turned left onto Fourth.

Then the Dodge Challenger slowly drives down Fourth—and pauses out of view near the mall crossing for nearly a minute. The car is seen backing up, and a moment later it speeds by.

“Take me out of this fucking shit,” yelled Marcus Martin, who was seen in photographs of the day being flipped over Fields’ car after it rammed into the crowd. Others in court wiped tears from their eyes.

At the beginning of the hearing, the prosecution upgraded a second-degree murder charge against Fields to first-degree murder for the death of Heyer, 32, which carries a penalty of 20 years to life in prison. He’s also charged with three counts of malicious wounding, three of aggravated malicious wounding, two of felony assault and one count of felony failure to stop.

Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Nina Antony questioned Young, who was on the scene after Fields was arrested at Monticello and Blenheim avenues. The detective noted the heavy front end damage to the Challenger and “what appeared to be blood and flesh on the front of the vehicle.”

Young also described two holes in the rear window and said they were made “after the initial crash,” which disputes allegations some white nationalists have made that Fields was surrounded by car-bashing protesters and feared for his life.

Fields, who drove to Charlottesville from Ohio, was known to spout Nazi and white supremacist rhetoric, according to his Kentucky high school social studies teacher.

During the rally, he stood with members of Vanguard America, but under questioning from Lunsford, Young testified there was no evidence Fields was a member of the white nationalist group.

After the rally was declared an unlawful assembly, Fields walked with three Vanguard Americans from Emancipation to McIntire Park , and Lunsford asked if they described him as “significantly less radical than some of those at the rally,” to which Young answered, yes.

When the detective first encountered him, Fields asked if anyone was hurt. And upon learning someone had died, he appeared shocked, testified Young.

“Did he cry and sob?” asked Lunsford.

“Yes,” replied the investigator.

Judge Bob Downer found probable cause to certify the charges to the grand jury, which meets December 18. If the grand jury indicts him, a trial date will be scheduled.

 

Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler allegedly took a job in Ohio, but he was in Charlottesville December 14 for court proceedings against rally attendees. Eze Amos
Susan Bro enters the courthouse to see the man accused of killing her daughter, Heather Heyer. Photo Eze Amos
Fields’ attorneys James Hill and Denise Lunsford enter the courthouse through a side door. Photo Eze Amos

 

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Quick trial resumes

Brothers have testified against each other and an ex-girlfriend has been pitted against her former boyfriend in a retrial for the suspects in the murder of Waynesboro Police Reserve Captain Kevin Quick after a May mistrial.

Quick, a 45-year-old father, was reported missing January 31, 2014, and his body was found in Goochland County a week later.

Suspects Daniel Mathis, Shantai Shelton, Mersadies Shelton and Kweli Uhuru (aka Travis Bell) are charged with kidnapping, robbery, racketeering and murder and are alleged members of a gang called the 99 Goon Syndikate, which has connections to the Bloods and is responsible for about a dozen robberies across Central Virginia near the end of 2013 and into 2014, according to the prosecution.

After the mistrial in Charlottesville’s U.S. District Court when one defendant obtained a list of potential jury members, the newly selected 12-member jury was chosen in a Roanoke federal court February 1, with opening statements beginning on February 3.

Former gang member and brother of Uhuru, Shaquan Jackson, testified that he was aware of Uhuru’s and other suspects’ affiliation with the gang. In November 2014, Jackson pleaded guilty to taking part in gang activity and agreed to testify against several of the defendants, according to NBC29.

Jackson referred to a 99 Goon Syndikate meeting, or “bee hive,” in summer 2013 after members in the Louisa County area had joined. That was shortly before the reported violent spree in Central Virginia.

The defense argued that this wasn’t necessarily gang related. And though Jackson testified that Uhuru had called him after murdering Quick, saying he needed to “lay low,” the defense got Jackson to admit that he has lied before to get what he wanted from police and argued that Jackson is hoping for a more lenient sentence in exchange for testimony.

On the fifth day of the trial, Devante Bell—another brother of Uhuru who has already pleaded guilty to the federal gang conspiracy charge—testified that he and Jackson were asked to help get rid of “some car,” which he believed to be Quick’s SUV.

Dierre Lloyd, Mathis’ former girlfriend, testified that he told her about killing a police officer and, though she initially tried to cover for him, she changed her mind when she was charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit robbery and two counts of robbery. She is currently on house arrest and has been granted immunity in exchange for her testimony, NBC29 reports.

After the defense cross-examined Lloyd, she admitted to the jury that there’s no reason to believe what she says and attorneys have questioned the credibility of all of the convicted witnesses, including Lloyd.

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Search warrant upheld: Judge denies motion to suppress evidence in Jesse Matthew case

An attorney for Jesse Matthew called the search warrant for Matthew’s Hessian Hills apartment so broad it amounted to a “fishing expedition” because it didn’t limit what could be considered trace evidence and biological material. At a January 21 hearing, Judge Cheryl Higgins denied the defense motion to suppress evidence collected.

The parents of Hannah Graham sat in court for the three-hour hearing across the room from the man charged with the capital murder of their daughter. They were joined on the second row by Gil Harrington, mother of Morgan Harrington, whose 2009 disappearance led to murder and abduction charges against Matthew.

Defense attorney Doug Ramseur argued that the warrant used in the September 19, 2014, search of Matthew’s apartment was not only too broad, but that some items seized were outside its scope. “This search warrant as written has a number of fatal defects that make it flawed,” said Ramseur.

He listed seven items he felt exhibited “flagrant disregard” for the search warrant and should lead to the suppression of all evidence collected: a Samsung cell phone, two pairs of boxers, a wallet, a cigar butt, a paycheck, khaki shorts and toothbrushes.

Detective Jeremy Carper had no way of knowing the Samsung cell phone he took was the one identified in the warrant as 434-960-5198 and believed to be Matthew’s, said Ramseur. Carper testified the phone was on a table beside a wallet containing Matthew’s ID, and its battery and SIM card had been removed.

Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Elliott Casey contended Carper had probable cause to believe it was Matthew’s because it was beside his wallet and had been disabled, and because Matthew had already indicated he wanted to leave town.

Ramseur also took issue with a pair of blue boxers and a pair of green ones taken that were not identified in the search warrant. Carper said another detective asked him to get them to have something a dog could sniff. Ramseur called it “general rummaging” under the guise of trace evidence, and said the detective did not see stains or hairs on the boxers to justify seizing them.

Carper used “unfettered discretion” when he took Matthew’s wallet with a receipt from Blue Light Grill the night Graham went missing, something the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled police may not do, said Ramseur.

The paycheck had a patent, or visible, fingerprint on it, and the search warrant only specified latent prints, said Ramseur. Police should have gotten another warrant if they wanted such prints, he said. Casey said, “A patent print is trace evidence.”

Perhaps the biggest item of contention was a pair of khaki shorts. The search warrant described “long white shorts,” which Matthew was seen wearing in a video with Graham the last night she was seen alive.

“These are not white shorts,” said Ramseur. “These are khaki. No one would confuse them with long white shorts.”

‘The shorts have hair on them,” countered Casey. “They were checked into evidence as white khakis.” As for whether they were long or short, that was “simply a semantic argument,” he said.

Judge Higgins disagreed items taken exceeded the scope of the search warrant, and said there was probable cause they were in connection to an abduction. “A search warrant has to be practical and factual,” she said.

Matthew’s next hearing is March 2, and he’s scheduled for trial July 5.