Diversity vs. Freedom in Idaho (contd.): Rae Acquitted on Felony,
Convicted on “Misdemeanor”
Diversity vs. Freedom (contd.): What First Amendment?
- By Sam Francis
Diversity vs. Freedom in Idaho: Race Relations Industry
Enters Spanish Inquisition Phase
Diversity vs. Freedom in Idaho: Paul Craig Roberts
Answers An Over-Scrupulous Very Conservative ...
Freedom vs. Diversity In Idaho: What Equal Protection?
By James
Fulford
Where else have you seen this reported: The Lonnie
Rae case has been
tried in
Payette, Idaho. After a two-day jury trial, Rae was
found not guilty of the Malicious Harassment, the
"hate crime" charge. He was, however found to have
committed the lesser offence of misdemeanor assault,
which was a surprise to his lawyer, as the indictment
hadn't included a charge of assault and it's
questionable whether
Malicious Harassment has "lesser, included
offenses."
On August 20, I wrote that Lonnie Rae
"offended
multicultural manners when he got in a
scuffle with Kenneth Manley at a high school
football game."
Brad Hem
reported in the Idaho Press-Tribune that:
In October, Notus High
School defeated Council High School in a football game
that sent Notus to the playoffs and ended Council’s
season. During the game, Council fans became upset at
the referees because they thought there were too many
penalties called.
Rae’s wife, Kim, was
covering the game as a freelance reporter and
photographer for the Adams County Record. After the
game, she tried to take pictures of the referees because
she thought it would add to her story.
When she continued to
snap pictures after the referees had asked her to stop,
one of the officials, Ken Manley of Boise, was reported
to have grabbed the camera and pulled it, causing the
strap to burn Kim Rae’s neck.
The two were separated
and the referees entered the locker room. Witnesses said
Lonnie Rae began yelling at Manley, who is black, and
repeatedly called him the “N-word.” Rae declined to
comment Monday.
Rae’s lawyer, Dan
Hawkley, said his client was simply coming to the
defense of his wife, who was simply doing her job.
“It’s our contention
that in fact the usage of the racial slur was not
racially motivated,” Hawkley said. “He probably would
have used some other word had the official been white.”
A first offence conviction for assault involves
virtually no punishment, and so is rarely appealed. But
Rae and his lawyer, Edgar Steele, plan to appeal on
principle.
Edgar Steele calls himself "Attorney for the Damned.”
He's certainly defended a number of
difficult and
unpopular cases.
He also seems to have accepted some
conspiracy theories on the subject of the WTC
bombings, believing things against the government that
he wouldn't allow the government to even suggest about
his clients without out some actual evidence.
If you like, you can join his e-mail list,
ConspiracyPenPals, for news of his cases and
theories.
But he was willing to represent Lonnie Rae pro
bono. And this may be what kept Rae from an actual
felony conviction in what amounts to a thought crime
trial.
The charge of malicious harassment leveled by
prosecutor Myron Gabbert was out of all proportion to
the “offense.” Rae at worst, committed assault without
battery, I.E. yelling without actual physical contact.
The case was reported on
ABC.com, which wrote
While the referees went on
into the locker room, the Raes said, Lonny asked his
wife what happened and she showed him burn marks on her
neck from the camera strap. Lonny Rae said he was
furious, and went after the man who had tried to get the
camera.
He found Adams County
Commissioner Ray Stoker at the door to the locker room.
"I looked at him and I said,
'You bring that n----- up here. I want to kick his f---ing
ass,'" Lonny Rae said. "He looked at me and said, 'Yeah,
sure you will, Lonny.'"
Lonny said it was clear to
Stoker that he was angry, and not likely to do harm to
the referee, who is larger than Lonny.
This is the kind of case that, when reported to the
police at all, generally leads to unsupervised probation
and no fine at all.
The Malicious Harassment charge is one that is
designed to deal with the motives for crimes, and
here can be used where there’s practically no crime.
Earlier, I wrote that the Lonnie Rae case was like
the old Spanish Inquisition cases, where he was being
charged with, in effect, having heretical thoughts.
Luckily for him, he had two things the Inquisitors’
victims didn’t have: a good lawyer, and
trial by jury.
If you get ever wonder why Paul Craig Roberts spends
so much time on
prosecutorial malfeasance, and Sam Francis spends so
much time worrying about military tribunals, you should
remember the case of Lonnie Rae, who almost went to
jail for using one unapproved word.
December 27, 2001