UNITED STATES ATTORNEY'S OFFICE

District of Oregon

PRESS ROOM

DOJ Seal

08/15/2006
 

Guilty Pleas In Federal Hate Crime Case
 

White supremacists guilty of attacking a Jewish synagogue

EUGENE, OREGON – Brothers JACOB ALBERT LASKEY, age 25, and GABRIEL DOYLE LASKEY, age 21, pled guilty in United States District Court to charges of conspiracy to deprive individuals of their civil rights and intentionally damaging religious property. JACOB LASKEY also pled guilty to solicitation to murder witnesses, soliciting a bomb threat against the federal courthouse in Eugene, two counts of obstruction of justice, and being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition. Both defendants are self-avowed white supremacists who admitted that they sought to commit acts of violence and destruction against Jews, African-Americans, and members of other ethnic and racial groups, whenever such opportunities arose, with one such attack taking place on October 25, 2002, against Temple Beth Israel located in Eugene, Oregon.

“Prosecuting individuals who seek to harm others because of their religion, race or national origin is a top priority of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Oregon and the Department of Justice,” stated United States Attorney Karin Immergut. “We will also aggressively investigate and prosecute those who try to intimidate witnesses from reporting such reprehensible acts to law enforcement.”

“As this successful prosecution makes clear, acts of violence and vigilantism targeted at individuals because of their race, religion, or national origin will not be permitted in the United States – they will be aggressively investigated, swiftly prosecuted and firmly punished,” stated Wan J . Kim, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division. “The Department of Justice is committed to fighting hate and intolerance, as they tear at the very fabric of our great nation, a fabric that is strengthened by its diversity of races, religions and national origins.”

According to stipulations included in their plea agreements and statements in court, the defendants conspired with co-defendants Gerald Poundstone and Jesse Baker, and another individual to intimidate Jewish persons at the Temple Beth Israel. The five men traveled to Temple Beth Israel at night in a vehicle driven by JACOB LASKEY. They then threw swastika-etched rocks, breaking two stained glass windows at the temple, while 80 members of the temple were inside attending a Jewish religious service. After throwing the rocks, the men ran to the vehicle and fled the scene. The defendants acknowledged in court that by throwing these rocks, they violated the victims’ rights to use, hold, and occupy religious real property free from discrimination on account of religion.

JACOB LASKEY admitted that following the attack upon the synagogue, he obstructed justice by seeking to corruptly persuade a witness not to appear at an official proceeding concerning the investigation of this matter and to withhold truthful information about the attack against the Temple Beth Israel. JACOB LASKEY also admitted intimidating or attempting to intimidate co-conspirator Jesse Baker, between the latter part of 2004 and the early part of 2005, in order to prevent Jesse Baker from communicating information related to defendant’s commission of a federal offense to agents of the FBI or the federal grand jury investigating this matter. In addition, JACOB LASKEY admitted soliciting Jesse Baker to kill potential witnesses and to call in a bomb threat to the Federal Courthouse in Eugene, where the grand jury convened to investigate his case.

Regarding the gun charge, JACOB LASKEY admitted that he had possessed a .45 caliber semi-automatic handgun and ammunition after having been convicted of two felony crimes, Assault in the Third Degree and Battery Evincing Racial Prejudice.

Based on their guilty pleas, JACOB LASKEY and GABRIEL LASKEY could be sentenced to a maximum of 10 years for the civil rights conspiracy charge and a maximum of 20 years for damaging religious property while using a dangerous weapon. Additionally, JACOB LASKEY faces a maximum of 20 years on two counts of obstructing justice, a maximum of 20 years for solicitation of murder, a maximum of 5 years for soliciting a bomb threat against the federal courthouse in order to obstruct justice, and a maximum of 10 years for being a felon in possession of a firearm. Each charge also carries a possible fine up to $250,000 and at least 3 years of supervised release.

The government’s case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney William E. (Bud) Fitzgerald and Civil Rights Division Trial Attorney Roy Conn, III. The case was investigated by Special Agents from the Eugene Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

JACOB LASKEY will be sentenced on October 24, 2006 at 10:30 a.m. at the United States District Courthouse in Eugene, before Judge Michael R. Hogan. GABRIEL LASKEY will be sentenced on November 7, 2006 at 10:30 a.m.

For additional information, please contact Assistant United States Attorney William E. (Bud) Fitzgerald at (541) 465-6846 or Cynthia Magnuson, United States Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, at (202) 514-2007.