A Virginia jury recommended a life sentence for James Alex Fields, the avowed neo-Nazi who killed Heather Heyer when he drove his car into a crowd of counter-protesters at the โUnite the Rightโ rally in Charlottesville, Va., last year.
Suggested Reading
Fields was convicted of first-degree murder last Friday, along with nine more charges including malicious wounding and fleeing the scene of a crime. As WTOP reports, the jury recommended an additional 20 years on three counts of malicious wounding, nine years for the hit-and-run, and a $100,000 fine.
The juryโs recommendation followed two days of emotional testimony from other victims of the Aug. 12 attack, including Heather Heyerโs mother, Susan Bro.
โHeather was full of love, full of justice, and full of fairness. Mr. Fields tried to silence her, but I refuse to allow that,โ Bro told the court on Monday. โIโm the type of mom where if you mess with my kid on the playground, itโs on. I stood up in her place. I talk to everyone who will listen about her and about hate.โ
Another of Fieldsโ victims, Jeanne โStarโ Peterson, told the jury her life has been a โliving nightmareโ since Fields plowed his car into the crowd that day. Peterson suffered a broken spine as a result of the attack and hasnโt been able to return to work, she says. Her right leg was also shattered, requiring five surgeries so far to try to repair it.
During the trial, Fieldsโ lawyer attempted to argue that, in driving his Dodge Challenger into the group of anti-white-supremacist counterprotesters, Fields was acting in โself-defense.โ According to NPR, attorney John Hill said Fields was โscared to deathโ and feared bodily harm after some Unite the Right rallygoers and counterprotesters clashed.
The jury didnโt buy it. With their recommendation, the decision to put Fields behind bars for the rest of his life now lies with a judge, who will impose a sentence on March 29. According to WTOP, Virginia judges will typically follow a juryโs recommendation and are prohibited from imposing stiffer sentences.
In addition to his state conviction, Fields is awaiting trial for federal hate crime charges, which could warrant the death penalty, NPR reports.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.