The Justice Department today announced that Marq Perez, 26,
was sentenced to more than 24 years in prison for burning down the Victoria
Islamic Center on Jan. 28, 2017. Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore of
the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, U.S. Attorney Ryan Patrick for
the Southern District of Texas, Special Agent in Charge Fred Milanowski of the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), and Special Agent in
Charge Perrye K. Turner of the FBI made the announcement.
A jury found Perez guilty on July 16, for a hate crime in
the burning of the Victoria Islamic Center (the mosque) on Jan. 28, 2017, and
for the use of fire to commit a federal felony.
In addition, the jury found that Perez possessed an unregistered
destructive device for a separate but related incident that occurred on Jan.
15, 2017.
“Everyone in this country has the right to worship freely
without fear of violence,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore.
“This defendant terrorized the Muslim community in Victoria, and the Department
partnered with federal, state, and local agencies to ensure that the person
responsible for this heinous hate crime would be found and prosecuted.”
“The Attorney General has said that the Freedom of religion
is indeed our ‘first freedom’—being the first listed right of our First
Amendment,” said Patrick. “The Department of Justice prosecutes violent and dangerous
crime, but also, and particularly when that crime interferes with someone’s
ability to practice their religious faith. Not only was this a dangerous and
potentially deadly act, but also one spurred from hate. I am glad justice was
served in this case.”
“ATF is the primary federal law enforcement agency tasked
with investigating House of Worship Fires and views an arson against a house of
worship as not just an attack on a building, but as an attack against an entire
community,” said Milanowski. “ATF is pleased the defendant has been held
accountable for this crime and will continue to respond to these violent crimes
using all available resources.”
“Mr. Perez sought to provoke terror within the tranquil
space of the Victoria Islamic Center," said FBI Assistant Special
Agent-in-Charge Edward Michel. "By deliberately burning down this mosque,
Mr. Perez attacked a specific religious congregation in the hope of spreading
fear, conflict and depriving Victoria’s Islamic community of their peaceful and
safe place to worship. Today's sentencing illustrates that hate crimes will not
be tolerated. No one in this country should feel afraid to openly practice
their religion or express their beliefs. The FBI will continue to aggressively
investigate civil rights violations wherever and whenever they occur."
Testimony at trial detailed how Perez conducted what he
described as “recon” by breaking into the mosque a week before he set it on
fire. Evidence presented at trial showed that Perez communicated with someone
through Facebook about breaking into the mosque a second time, the same night
of the fire. A witness who was with Perez on the night of the fire described
how Perez used a lighter to set papers on fire inside the mosque and how
excited Perez was upon seeing the mosque in flames just minutes later. The
witness testified that Perez said that he burned down the mosque, because he
wanted to “send a message.” During the execution of a search warrant, federal
agents recovered stolen property taken from the mosque the night of the fire in
Perez’s home. Several witnesses at trial also testified about Perez’s animus
towards Muslims and that he often used anti-Muslim slurs.
When Perez learned that the Victoria Muslim community had
raised money to rebuild the mosque, he told a witness that he would burn the
mosque down again if it was rebuilt.
Members of the mosque testified at the trial that they
watched from afar as federal, state, and local law enforcement officers tried
to extinguish the fire, but observed that the fire could not be put out until
it had engulfed the entire mosque. Those witnesses also testified that, after
the destruction of the mosque, the Victoria Islamic Center raised money online
from over 20,000 individuals from all over the United States and over 90
countries to rebuild the mosque.
ATF and FBI conducted the investigation along with the City
of Victoria Fire Marshal’s Office, Victoria Fire Department, Victoria Police
Department, Texas Department of Public Safety - Criminal Investigations
Division and Texas Rangers with assistance of Texas State Fire Marshal’s Office
and Sheriff’s Offices in Victoria and Nueces Counties and the Victoria County
District Attorney’s Office.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Sharad S. Khandelwal and Kate Suh
prosecuted the case along with Trial Attorney Saeed Mody of the Department of
Justice’s Civil Rights Division.
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