Tammy Dickinson, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, and
Jocelyn Samuels, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights
Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, announced that an
Independence, Mo., man and woman pleaded guilty in federal court today
to violating the civil rights of an African-American family by setting
fire to their residence.
Logan J. Smith, 25, and Victoria A. Cheek-Herrera, 34, both of
Independence, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Brian C. Wimes
to one count of conspiring to threaten and intimidate an Independence
family from exercising their constitutional right to reside in their
home because of their race or color and one count of a civil rights
violation for committing a racially-motivated arson. Smith waived his
right to a grand jury indictment and pleaded guilty to a two-count
information, whereas Cheek-Herrera pleaded guilty to two of three counts
charged in an indictment returned by the grand jury on May 23, 2013.
By pleading guilty, Smith and Cheek-Herrera admitted that on June 26,
2008, they conspired to injure, oppress, threaten and intimidate an
African-American couple and their minor children in the free exercise of
their constitutional rights to occupy and rent their home in
Independence, because of their race and color.
According to the plea agreements, Smith and Cheek-Herrera discussed
their desire to set fire to the home of the couple, and they drew a
swastika and wrote the words “White Power” on the driveway. Smith and
Cheek-Herrera asked a juvenile acquaintance for gasoline and then
created a Molotov cocktail by filling a glass bottle with gasoline and
inserting a rag into the bottle to serve as a wick. Smith and
Cheek-Herrera then lit the wick and threw the gasoline-filled bottle
into the side of the house that the couple was renting and set the
residence on fire.
Smith and Cheek-Herrera each face a statutory maximum penalty of 10
years in prison and a fine of $250,000 for one count of conspiracy
against rights and a statutory maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and
a fine of $250,000 for one count of interference with housing rights.
This case was investigated by the FBI and is being prosecuted by First
Assistant U.S. Attorney David M. Ketchmark and Trial Attorney Shan Patel
of the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice.
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