Dallas Times Herald September 30, 1989 (A1) 5 more skinheads indicted in Dallas By Scott Sunde of the Times Herald Staff In a blow aimed at the heart of the white supremacist movement in Dallas, a federal grand jury has indicted five skinheads on weapons and civil rights charges involving assaults on blacks and Hispanics at a Turtle Creek park and vandalism of Jewish institutions. Charges against the five, all members of a group known as the Confederate Hammerskins, stem from a local and federal investigation into the skinhead violence in the summer and fall of 1988. So far, a grand jury sitting in Dallas has indicted 16 people, seven of whom have pleaded guilty. The most recent indictment underscores the Justice Department's intention to give prosecution of hate crimes the highest priority, said James Turner, acting assistant attorney general in the Justice Department's civil rights division. "These indictments involve interference with basic civil rights because of a person's race, religion, national origin or ethnic background," Turner said Friday at a news conference announcing the indictment. "Racial hate crimes are crimes against the very idea of American freedom and democracy." The Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith in recent years has identified more than 100 skinheads in the Dallas area, although there usually are 30 to 40 active members at any one time. Skinheads are known for their shaved heads, stell-toed boots and quasi-military clothing and racist, anti-Semitic rhetoric. The three-count indictment unsealed Friday names Sean Tarrant, 20, Jon Jordan, 19, Michael Lawrence, 21, Christopher Greer, 24, and Daniel Wood, 20. All but Lawrence, who lives in Tulsa, are from the Dallas area. Authorities said Tarrant, Greer and Wood were in custody Friday. The indictment's first count alleges that all five conspired in the spring and summer of 1988 to deny blacks and Hispanics their civil rights by chasing them out of Robert E. Lee Park, which Justice Department attorney Barry Kowalski said the men view "as a symbol of white supremacy." The indictment charges that some of the skinheads assaulted black men in the park, including one man who was beaten with a baseball bat. The second count charges that the five men conspired in a plan that resulted in vandalism at Temple Shalom and the Jewish Community Center, both in North Dallas. It also alleges Wood, Jordan, Lawrence and Greer decided on Nov. 9, 1988, to vandalize Jewish businesses to mark the 50th anniversay of Kristallnacht -- a night of widespread violence against Jews and their property in Nazi Germany. Police stopped Wood and Jordan the night of Nov. 9 in a truck carrying baseball bats, ball bearings, concrete blocks and spray paint -- items the indictment said were to be used to vandalize Jewish businesses. The final count accuses Wood, Lawrence and Jordan of using a gun while committing a federal crime. Dallas County Assistant District Attorney Mike Gillett, who helped in the investigation, said the crimes spelled out in the indictment are the product of "warped-thinking political cowards" and "simple-minded terrorists" who "attack not only fundamental freedoms guaranteed by law but a code of moral decency." The first two counts carry a penalty of up to 10 years in prison and a fine of $250,000. The last carries a mandatory five years in prison and a fine of $250,000. Wood was sentenced to 10 years in prison by a state court in January for defacing Temple Shalom in October 1988. Earlier this month, he pleaded guilty in federal court to fleeing the state to avoid testifying before a grand jury about the attempted fire-bombing of a Kaufman County church. Federal agents declined to say whether the five men held posts of importance in the Confederate Hammerskins. But Mark Briskman, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League, said the five are leaders of the group. He and local and federal authorities agreed that the combined federal-local investigation, which continues, has reduced skinhead violence in Dallas. The most recent indictments, Briskman said, represent "a very important national statement by this administration and by the Justice Department that they are not going to tolerate this kind of assault on minorities in this country." He also noted that the indictment was announced just hours before the start of Rosh Hashana, the celebration of the Jewish new year. The indictment will affirm to Dallas Jews that they can attend Rosh Hashana services "without having to fear being able to worship freely," Briskman said. But Rabbi Kenneth Roseman said he could not look upon the indictments without some sadness. "We're saddened by any violence or prejudice by any groups whether it's directed against us or any groups," he said. = 30 =
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