WASHINGTON—A jury in Cleveland today
convicted 16 people, all residents of Ohio, of federal hate crimes arising out
of a series of religiously motivated assaults on practitioners of the Amish
religion, the Justice Department announced.
The convictions stem from a series of
separate hate crime assaults that occurred in four Ohio counties between
September and November 2011. In each assault, defendants forcibly removed beard
and head hair from practitioners of the Amish faith with whom they had ongoing
religious disputes. In three of these hate crime assaults, defendants invaded
the homes of these practitioners and restrained their movements while shearing
their hair, causing pain and other physical injuries. The manner in which Amish
men wear their beards and Amish women wear their hair are symbols of their
faith, according to trial testimony.
Samuel Mullet, Sr., 66; Johnny S.
Mullet, 39; Daniel S. Mullet, 38; Levi F. Miller, 54; Eli M. Miller, 32;
Emanuel Shrock, age unknown; Lester Miller, 37; Anna Miller, age unknown; Linda
Shrock, age unknown; Emma J. Miller, age unknown; Kathryn Miller, age unknown;
and Lovina Miller, age 32, all of Bergholz, Ohio; Raymond Miller, 27; Freeman
Burkholder, 31; Elizabeth A. Miller, age unknown; and Kathryn Miller, age
unknown, all from Irondale, Ohio; and Lester Mullet, 27, of Hammondsville,
Ohio, were found guilty of conspiring to violate the Matthew Shepard-James
Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which prohibits any person from willfully
causing bodily injury to any person, or attempting to do so by use of a
dangerous weapon, because of the actual or perceived religion of that person.
The jury also convicted various groups
of defendants with four hate crime counts against eight specific victims and
found that such hate crimes involved kidnapping. The jury also convicted Samuel
Mullet, Sr., Lester Mullet, and Eli Miller with concealing or attempting to
conceal various items of tangible evidence. Finally, the jury also convicted
Sam Mullet of making false statements to the FBI.
Judge Dan Aaron Polster scheduled a
sentencing hearing on January 24, 2013. The defendants face terms of up to life
in prison.
“The violent and offensive actions of
these defendants, which were aimed at beliefs and symbols held sacred by this
country’s Amish citizens, are an affront to religious freedom and tolerance,
which are core values protected by our Constitution and our civil rights laws,”
said Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division.
“Those laws prohibit the use of violence to settle religious differences and
the Department of Justice and the Civil Rights Division will vigorously enforce
those laws.”
Samuel Mullet, Sr. is the bishop of the
Amish community in Bergholz, Ohio, while the remaining defendants are all
members of that community. Mullet, Sr. exerted control over the Bergholz
community by taking the wives of other men into his home and by overseeing
various means of disciplining community members, including corporal punishment,
according to trial testimony.
As a result of religious disputes with
other members of the Ohio Amish community, the defendants planned and carried
out a series of assaults on their perceived religious enemies. The assaults
involved the use of hired drivers, either by the defendants or the alleged
victims, because practitioners of the Amish religion do not operate motor
vehicles. The assaults all entailed using scissors and battery-powered clippers
to forcibly cut or shave the beard hair of the male victims and the head hair
of the female victims, according to the indictment.
During each assault, the defendants
restrained and held down the victims. During some of the assaults, the
defendants injured individuals who attempted to intervene to protect or rescue
the victims. Following the attacks, some of the defendants participated in
discussions about concealing photographs and other evidence of the assaults,
according to evidence presented at trial.
“From day one, this case has been about
the rule of law and defending the right of people to worship in peace,” said
Steven Dettelbach, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio. “Our nation
was founded on the bedrock principle that everyone is free to worship how they
see fit. Violent attempts to attack this most basic freedom have no place in our
country.”
“This case is an excellent example of
cooperation between the many law enforcement agencies that investigated these
crimes, along with the prosecution team from the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the
Department of Justice,” said Stephen Anthony, Special Agent in Charge of the
FBI-Cleveland Field Office. “The FBI is committed to investigating hate crimes,
including those perpetrated against people motivated by bias toward religion as
in this case, or other areas protected by our civil rights statutes.”
This case was investigated by the
Cleveland Division of the FBI and was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Thomas Getz and Bridget M. Brennan of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the
Northern District of Ohio and Deputy Chief Kristy Parker of the Justice Department’s
Civil Rights Division. The prosecutor’s and sheriff’s offices from Holmes,
Carroll, and Jefferson Counties also provided significant assistance in the
investigation and prosecution of this case.
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