Jean-Claude Bridges pleaded guilty earlier this year to deliberately
setting a church on fire and was sentenced this morning in the U.S.
District Court for the Western District of Virginia in Danville, Va.
Bridges was sentenced to
serve two years in prison, two years of supervised release and ordered to pay $141,773.68 in restitution
.
Bridges, 18, of Henry County, Va., pleaded guilty to one count of
destroying a religious property by fire. Prior to his guilty plea, the
court granted a government motion to transfer Bridges to adult status
for criminal prosecution. The defendant was 17-years-old when the
criminal conduct occurred.
“The freedom to practice the religion that we choose in a safe
environment without being subjected to hateful acts is among our
nation’s most cherished rights,” said Roy L. Austin, Jr., Deputy
Assistant Attorney General of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights
Division. “Anyone who violates this right will be prosecuted to the
fullest extent of the law.”
“Mr. Bridges’ racial bias led him to commit the dangerous crime of
arson,” United States Attorney Timothy J. Heaphy said today. “When he
set fire to the New Holy Deliverance Outreach Ministry, he endangered
neighbors and first responders. This act of prejudice offended the
entire community. This office will protect the civil rights of everyone
and vigorously prosecute crimes like that committed by Mr.
Bridges. Racism has no place in Axton or anywhere else in the Western
District of Virginia.”
According to filings in the case, on May 20, 2012, at approximately 1:20
a.m., Bridges and another juvenile intentionally set fire to New Holy
Deliverance Outreach Ministry, a church with a predominantly African
American congregation, located in Axton, Va. In pleading guilty to this
offense, Bridges admitted that he burned down New Holy Deliverance
Outreach Ministry because of the race, color and ethnic characteristics
of its congregants.
The investigation of the case was conducted by the Henry County
Department of Public Safety, the Henry County Sheriff’s Office and the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Cullen, assisted by Trial
Attorney Christopher Lomax of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights
Division, will prosecute the case for the United States.
No comments:
Post a Comment