Mississippi man sentenced to 11 years for cross burning

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Mississippi man is jailed for 11 years after deliberately burning crosses in a black neighborhood to terrorize the residents
  • Louie Revette, 38, pleaded guilty in April to the cross-burning
  • He was sentenced Tuesday to 11 years in federal prison
  • Revette admitted he went to what he knew to be a predominantly black neighborhood in Seminary, Mississippi
  • He built a cross to threaten, frighten and intimidate black residents because of their race and color
  • 'I want everyone to know I'm not proud of what happened. I hate what I did. I can't even believe I did that. I never done anything like that before,' he said
By Associated Press

Published: 16:31 EDT, 10 September 2019 | Updated: 20:05 EDT, 10 September 2019

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...man-gets-11-years-cross-burning.html#comments
A white Mississippi man received an 11-year prison sentence Tuesday for his part in burning a cross near the home of an African American family.

Louie Bernard Revette, 38, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Keith Starrett in Hattiesburg, the Justice Department said.

Revette pleaded guilty in April to one count each of interference with housing rights, which is a federal civil rights violation, and of using fire during the commission of a federal felony.

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Louie Bernard Revette, burned the cross to frighten and intimidate African American residents in Seminary, Mississippi, in October 2017,

Revette acknowledged recruiting someone to help him build a cross to burn near the home of a teenager in a predominantly black area of Seminary on October 24, 2017.

He also acknowledged building the cross to threaten, frighten and intimidate people because of their race.

Revette expressed remorse at his sentencing hearing, the Hattiesburg American reported.

'I want everyone to know I'm not proud of what happened,' Revette said. 'I hate what I did. I can't even believe I did that. I never done anything like that before in my life.'

Seminary is a town of with about 300 residents, located about 70 miles south of Jackson.



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Revette admitted he went to what he knew to be a predominantly black neighborhood in Seminary, Mississippi and set fire to a wooden cross that he had built, pictured

Revette's accomplice, Graham Williamson, pleaded guilty to the same two charges in August and is scheduled to be sentenced in November.

None of the victim's relatives were in court Tuesday, but the newspaper reported that the victim's grandmother, Rose Marie Shears, told the U.S. attorney's office that the cross burning revived fear and terror of the past.

She told prosecutors that she is afraid that Revette and Williamson or others will return and harm the family.

Cross burnings have historically been used by racist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan to rally supporters and terrorize black people in the South and elsewhere.

'Those who instill fear and terror into our neighbors and our fellow citizens because of the color of their skin will face the full weight and force of the law from the U.S. attorney's office,' Mike Hurst, U.S. attorney for south Mississippi, said in a Justice Department statement Tuesday.

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Revette admitted he built a cross to threaten, frighten and intimidate black residents because of their race and color. Pictured, the burnt out remnants of the cross

'There is absolutely no place in our society or our country for this type of behavior, and we will do all that we can to prevent these racist acts and bring to justice those who are intent on committing these crimes.'

In 2017, a man pleaded guilty to federal charges after prosecutors said he and three other men burned a cross more than 6 feet high in the front yard of an interracial couple's home in Port Richey, Florida, in 2012.

Other cross burnings in the past decade have occurred in Richmond Hill, Georgia; Minor Hill, Tennessee; Woodland, Pennsylvania; Salado, Arkansas; and Bennington Township, Ohio, among other places, according to Justice Department records.

Eric Dreiband, an assistant attorney general in the Civil Rights Division, said in the statement Tuesday that Revette 'terrorized members of a community simply because of their race and where they lived.'

'The Department of Justice will not tolerate these acts of hate, and we will continue to prosecute hate crimes like these to the fullest extent of the law,' Dreiband said.
 
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press release from the feds

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
Mississippi Man Sentenced to 11 Years for Crossburning
The Honorable Judge Keith Starrett, of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, sentenced defendant Louie Bernard Revette, 38, to serve 11 years on federal charges for his commission of a crossburning on Oct. 24, 2017, in Seminary, Mississippi. Revette previously pled guilty on April 12, to one count of interference with housing rights, a federal civil rights violation, and one count of using fire to commit a federal felony. Revette, along with a co-conspirator whom he recruited, built and burned a wooden cross near the home of a juvenile victim, M.H., who lived in a predominantly African-American residential area of Seminary. He burned the cross to threaten, frighten, and intimidate M.H. and other African-American residents because of their race and color, and because they lived in and occupied residences in that area of Seminary.

“The defendant terrorized members of a community simply because of their race and where they lived,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the Civil Rights Division. “The Department of Justice will not tolerate these acts of hate, and we will continue to prosecute hate crimes like these to the fullest extent of the law.”

“Those who instill fear and terror into our neighbors and our fellow citizens because of the color of their skin will face the full weight and force of the law from the U.S. Attorney’s Office,” said U.S. Attorney Mike Hurst of the Southern District of Mississippi. “There is absolutely no place in our society or our country for this type of behavior, and we will do all that we can to prevent these racist acts and bring to justice those who are intent on committing these crimes.”

“All Mississippians have the right to feel safe in their communities, but crimes like these only tear open wounds that are still healing,” said Michelle A. Sutphin, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI in Mississippi. “The FBI and our partners will not tolerate crimes motivated by hate, and we will vigorously pursue those that commit them.”

This case was investigated by the FBI’s Jackson, Mississippi Field Office, including the FBI Safe Streets Task Force and the Jackson Public Corruption Task Force. Special Litigation Counsel Julia Gegenheimer of the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and Assistant U.S. Attorney Candace Mayberry of the Southern District of Mississippi prosecuted the case
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Dude is a racist & he only regrets getting convicted , his hatred will intensify if he actually spends his time in prison . I hope he loses his appeal. What did this man do for a living
 
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