Dallas Morning News July 27, 1989 (A24) 6 skinheads will plead guilty to rights charges Action result of U.S. probe of racial violence By Lee Hancock Staff Writer of the Dallas Morning News Six North Texas members of the white supremacist Confederate Hammerskins have agreed to plead guilty to civil rights charges and other federal violations, the U.S. Justice Department said Wednesday. A seventh skinhead, Daniel Alvis Wood, was indicted Wednesday on a charge of fleeing the state in May to avoid federal prosecution and a federal grand jury subpoena. Mr. Wood, 20, was sentenced in January to 10 years in state prison for vandalizing a Dallas synagogue last October. He was free on bond pending appeal when he failed to answer a subpoena to appear before a federal grand jury on May 25. The indictment and plea agreements represent the first formal charges brought in a Justice Department investigation of racially inspired violence and vandalism by the Confederate Hammerskins, federal officials said. The Dallas-based skinhead group's members wear close-cropped hair and steel-toed boots and espouse anti-Semitic, racist beliefs. One of the six, Waco resident Andrew Francis Flowers, 19, appeared Wednesday before U.S. District Judge Barefoot Sanders. Mr. Flowers pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor civil rights charge in connection with two rampages by skinheads in Robert E. Lee Park last July and August. An arraignment for a second man, Michael Edward Cannon of Fort Worth, was postponed at his attorney's request. Mr. Cannon was named with Mr. Flowers in a criminal information detailing the Lee Park incidents. The information, filed Monday, is an outline of charges filed in lieu of an indictment because the defendents agreed to plead guilty. Mr. Flowers declined to comment. A document outlining the charge said he and "numerous other Confederate Hammerskins" went to Lee Park twice last summer to intimidate blacks. They chased two from the park and assaulted at least one, the document said. "Mr. Flowers understood the purpose of patrolling the park on this night was to chase blacks from a park which his group considered to be a symbol of the Confederacy, and thus white supremacy," the document said. Mr. Flowers and Mr. Cannon each face a maximum of one year in prison and a $5,000 fine. Mr. Wood faces a maximum of five years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine. Mr. Flowers will be granted immunity from further federal and state prosecution in exchange for cooperation with the federal investigation, according to his plea agreement. Federal officials also announced the filing of an information naming four juvenile skinheads in a two-count delinquency charge. The information was ordered sealed because the four are minors. A statement released by the Justice Department said the four were charged in Lee Park incidents against blacks and "vandalism of Jewish properties." The Justice Department investigation was prompted by concerns raised by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith and others that the skinhead movement, although small, was spreading anti-Semitic violence nationwide. The Confederate Hammerskins is one of the better-known skinhead groups in the nation. One founder is serving an 18-month sentence for attempted murder in Milwaukee. Another member, Shawn Michael Day, 28, was sentenced last month to 30 years in state prison for attacking an off-duty Plano police officer. = 30 =
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