Suspect in Portland double murder posted white supremacist material online | US news | The Guardian

Source: Suspect in Portland double murder posted white supremacist material online | US news | The Guardian

Police in Portland, Oregon, have charged a white supremacist with a double murder and hate crimes, after he allegedly cut the throats of two passengers and stabbed another on a commuter train late on Friday afternoon.

According to police, while riding the MAX train in suburban northeast Portland, Jeremy Joseph Christian, 35, began “yelling various remarks that would best be characterized as hate speech toward a variety of ethnicities and religions”.

When fellow passengers attempted to intervene, Christian stabbed three of them. One man, 53-year-old Ricky John Best of Happy Valley, Oregon, died at the scene. Another, 23-year-old Taliesin Myrddin Namkai Meche of southeast Portland, was pronounced dead at a local hospital. A third, 21-year-old Micah Fletcher, was treated for injuries police said were “not expected to be life-threatening”.

The targets of Christian’s reported abuse included two young women who left the scene. Police said they may have been Muslim and that one may have been wearing a hijab, and appealed for these women to come forward.

Reaction in the city ranged from shock to defiance. In a media conference on Saturday afternoon, mayor Ted Wheeler called the attack “a horrific act of racist violence” and pointed to the current political climate as a factor in the crime, saying: “Violent words lead to violent acts.”

Others who spoke included the governor of Oregon, Kate Brown, and Portland district attorney Rod Underhill. Underhill urged Portlanders to “stand up, not stand down” to racism, and reminded the media that aggravated murder – one of the crimes with which Christian has been charged – is “a capital offense in Oregon”.

FBI special agent in charge Loren Cannon said it was “too early to say” whether the attacks constituted domestic terrorism under federal law.

Another speaker, Wadji Said from the Interfaith Council of Portland, compared the stabbings to the 1988 murder of Ethiopian immigrant Mulugeta Seraw by racist skinheads in the city.


Jeremy Joseph Christian, 35, of North Portland, Oregon. Photograph: Police handout/Reuters

After the attacks, Christian reportedly fled on foot from the Hollywood Transit Station to a nearby medical center, where he was soon apprehended by police. An amateur video published by the Oregonian appeared to show Christian taunting officers before his arrest.

He was booked into Multnomah County jail and charged with two counts each of aggravated murder and intimidation in the second degree, a hate crime offense. He was also charged with attempted murder and felon in possession of a restricted weapon. He was scheduled to be arraigned on Monday in Multnomah County court.

Christian had been a prominent and vocal participant in recent “alt-right” rallies in Portland. At a “free speech rally” in Montavilla City Park on 29 April he was captured on video wrapped in an American flag, giving Nazi salutes. Earlier that day, police reportedly confiscated a baseball bat from him. Local reporters captured him yelling racial slurs and threatening to shoot “anyone who tries to disarm me”.

Cat Davila, who was among counterprotesters at the rally, said Christian “showed up part way through the event and came striding straight toward the counter-demonstrator crowd very purposefully waving a baseball bat by his side and staring us down”. As he drew closer, Davila said, police “blocked him and took his bat and from then on he just yelled a lot”.

Christian’s Facebook page revealed obsessive concern with far-right themes. In recent weeks he posted memes and other material attacking “antifascist” protesters who have clashed with various “alt-right” rallies around the country. In the lead-up to the April rally, he posted: “Looking for a couple guys or gals down to unmask anyone wear[ing] a mask at the upcoming Free Speech March”, referring to the anti-fascist practice of disguising protesters’ identities.

Christian also posted openly antisemitic and neo-Nazi material. On 9 May, he claimed to have challenged Nuremberg prosecutor Ben Ferencz to a future debate, in which “I will defend the Nazis”. The same day, he posted “Hail Vinland!!! Hail Victory!!!”, combining a familiar catchphrase that was used at a post-election rally by the activist Richard Spencer.

Portland-based antifascist researcher Shane Burley, author of the forthcoming book Fascism Today, told the Guardian that “Vinland” refers to the area of eastern Canada that Leif Erikson supposedly settled from Iceland. On the far right, he said, it is used as a way of asserting that white nationalists “are Vikings in a new land continuing the ancient battle for the preservation of their people”.

Christian wrote several recent posts opposing male circumcision, writing that “I want a job in Norway cutting off the heads of people that circumcize babies” and posting articles about recent attempts in Norway to ban the practice. Circumcision, Burley said, “is a common men’s rights activist talking point to signify a culturewide persecution of men”.

Christian also posted material from media outlets depicting his participation in the April rally, referring to his use of an American flag as a cape as his “Lizard King Regalia”.

His engagement with far-right politics may be relatively new. A person who knew him in Portland’s heavy metal scene, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that when he first encountered him eight years ago he was apolitical.

“Jeremy has always been an extremely damaged person since I’ve known him,” the person said. “He practically grew up in prison and his childhood was horrific but I’ve always known him to have a kind heart.” Christian had been given a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, the person said, and “has an extremely obsessive personality. He gets fixed on a thing or an idea and flies off the edge of the world with it”.

According to records, Christian has a history of violence. In 2002, wearing a ski mask, he handcuffed a north Portland shopkeeper to the counter while stealing cash and cigarettes. Following the robbery, Christian was shot in the face by a Portland police officer.

Searches revealed 2002 convictions for kidnapping in the second degree, carrying and using a dangerous weapon, and robbery in the first degree. Records also showed that Christian had been charged with, but not convicted of, offenses ranging from felon in possession of a firearm to supplying contraband.

 


A crowd at the vigil in Portland, Oregon, for Ricky John Best and Taliesin Myrddin Namkai Meche. Photograph: Jason Wilson/the Guardian

The attack on Friday came just a week before another “free speech rally” in downtown Portland, planned for 4 June. The event is being organized by Patriot Prayer, the group that organized the event in April, and will feature a number of national alt-right celebrities. Anti-fascists are organizing a counterprotest.

One of the main anti-fascist groups organizing that protest, Rose City Antifa, issued a rare press release late on Saturday. It said Christian was “merely one of many white supremacists who attended a number of recent rallies organized by Vancouver, Washington video blogger Joey Gibson”. Gibson leads the Patriot Prayer group.

Rose City Antifa recommitted to opposing the “free speech” rally next Saturday, saying that “on 4 June the Portland community will say ‘No!’ to fascism, as a warning to white supremacists that their organizing will not be tolerated in our communities”.

Later, at a candlelight vigil on the lawn outside the Hollywood Transit Center, a number of impromptu speakers praised the heroism of the men who died in defence of fellow citizens. At least 2,000 people attended, many carrying flowers to add to an makeshift memorial.

 


Amer Salam, left, and Keenan Davis at the vigil in Portland. Photograph: Jason Wilson/the Guardian

Two Muslim Portlanders, Keenan Davis and Amer Salam, said the attacks had cast a pall over the start of Ramadan.

“The night before Ramadan, after prayer, usually it’s a hangout, especially for the dudes,” Davis said. “You might talk about the Cavaliers and Celtics, or how hungry you are gonna be for the upcoming days. Just chilling.

“Last night there was extra security around prayers, and there’s fear. How many people would like to be told they can’t hang out after church on Sunday?”

He was saddened but not surprised by the attack. In recent months, he said, those with anti-Islamic prejudices had become “more confident” in their desire to “impose themselves on the rest of us”.

 

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