California Was Ready to Punish This Synagogue Shooter for Murder. The Feds Want to Make Sure He Is Also Punished for Hating Jews.
The federal hate crime charges against John T. Earnest are redundant and constitutionally problematic.

Yesterday federal prosecutors in California announced that they are charging John T. Earnest, the alleged perpetrator of last month's shooting at a synagogue near San Diego, with 108 hate crimes in connection with that attack, which killed one person and injured three others. The 19-year-old Rancho Peñasquitos resident already faced murder and attempted murder charges under state law, but the Justice Department wants to make sure he also gets punished for his anti-Semitism.
The 108 charges include "obstruction of free exercise of religious beliefs using a dangerous weapon" and "hate crimes in relation to the shooting in violation of the Mathew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act." The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of California is alleging one count of each for each of the 54 people who were in the synagogue at the time of the attack. The FBI says Earnest also admitted setting fire to an Escondido mosque in March, which led to a 109th charge, for "damage to religious property by use of fire."
The federal charges, which can be punished by life in prison or the death penalty, make it more likely that Earnest will be executed for his crimes. He might be eligible for the death penalty under California law as well, but Gov. Gavin Newsom recently imposed a moratorium on executions in that state.
As with Charleston mass murderer Dylann Roof, Charlottesville killer James Fields, and Pittsburgh shooter Robert Bowers, the evidence against Earnest will include the opinions he expressed before the attack. "After the shooting," the DOJ press release says, "law enforcement investigators found a manifesto online bearing Earnest's name. A copy of the manifesto was later found on Earnest's laptop during the execution of a search warrant. In the manifesto, Earnest made many anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim statements. Specifically, Earnest referred to 'Jews' as a race, and he stated his only regret was that he did not kill more people."
If Earnest had not written his anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim manifesto, it would be harder for prosecutors to prove that he targeted his victims because of their religion. Without that element, the federal hate crime charges would not apply, meaning he would be punished only under state law, probably by life in prison rather than the death penalty. It is therefore not far-fetched to say the manifesto could be the difference between life and death for Earnest, in which case he would effectively be punished for his abhorrent beliefs as well as his appalling actions.
"No one in this country should be subjected to unlawful violence, injury, or death for who they are or for their religious beliefs," said Eric Dreiband, the assistant attorney general in charge of the DOJ's Civil Rights Division. "Our actions today are inspired by our desire to achieve justice for all of the victims and their families."
I'd go a bit further than Dreiband, since I believe no one in this country should be subjected to unlawful violence, injury, or death for any reason. When they are, state courts are fully capable of seeking "justice for all of the victims and their families."
There is no constitutional justification for the federal government to get involved, and when it does the prospect of serial trials or multiple punishments for the same crime should trouble anyone who thinks the Framers were onto something when they wrote the Fifth Amendment's ban on double jeopardy. Worse, the justification for all this duplicative effort is precisely to punish people for their bigoted beliefs, which are supposed to be protected by the First Amendment.
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Federal prosecutors need to wet their beaks.
Tell that to the rest of the social left.
But if hating Joos were a crime, we could lock up half the Democrat Party.
And has anyone heard from Sheldon Richman the last 12-18 months?
The worst thing about "hate crimes" to me is the implication that some violent crime isn't as bad. So if the shooter had killed some people at the supermarket because he was bored? Well that's not great... But at least it's not a hate crime!
The implication isn't that violent crime isn't as bad; it's that hate crimes are even worse. Regular violence is awful, but targeted violence for genocidal reasons is certainly different and should be treated as such. Don't be a glass half empty kind of guy.
They are absolutely asinine.
But they also need to be applied equally.
You don't fix a problem by unequal enforcement of the problem.
Seems a bit silly to me to expect a problem to be fixed by equal enforcement either.
Hate crimes up 400% in the bluest, liberalist, progressivist city in the Universe.
"hate crimes in relation to the shooting in violation of the Mathew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act."
Even though Shepard was murdered in a drug deal, and not because of being gay.
Shhh... shhh...
Narratives to uphold here
Can we execute a perp more than once? I seem to recall from a history class on the Middle Ages that a pope was exhumed so he could be put on trial...and then they threw his rotten carcass into the Tiber. That sure showed him.
“There is no constitutional justification for the federal government to get involved,”
Duh. That’s because the Constitution is racist.
>>>with 108 hate crimes in connection with that attack
nice overreach douchebags. can't get him on the murder alone? obstruction of free exercise and hate crime charges ludicrous in a free society.
Newsom's moratorium may be less than meets they eye:
"To impose a de facto moratorium on capital punishment in California, Newsom will grant reprieves to all death row inmates that will stay in place throughout his time as governor. But the reprieves will expire as soon as Newsom leaves office, pushing the life-and-death decisions to his successor.
"Newsom also has authority to commute sentences to life in prison for condemned inmates convicted of a single felony. But the governor cannot commute the sentences of prisoners convicted of two separate felonies — a population that includes more than half the inmates on death row — without the approval of the California Supreme Court."
https://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-governor-gavin-newsom-death-penalty-moratorium-20190312-story.html
And the current defendant hasn't been sentenced, and the gov can only grant clemency *after* the sentence:
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=CONS§ionNum=SEC.%208.&article=V
So what is California going to do?
Give this asshole TWO life sentences?
How is that going to work out?
Is Mr. John T. Earnest going to prison as soon as he's born if he reincarnated, or does he have to wait until he's 18 in his next life?
We have the concept of “crime” to inform people that causing harm to others is wrong and will result in punishment.
If they weren’t Jews they’d be just as murdered.
As we fly up our own assholes trying to hate in the right way, it’s just so damn confusing.
Hatred is lying and lying is hatred. Stop one by stopping the other.
But we won’t because our entire corrupt system is based on it.
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Hate crime laws are unconstitutional. If you kill a white person or black person, you should go to jail for the same amount of time, whatever the motives, if it was an intentional killing of another person, then you get life. I personally think those people should be off the streets forever. The same goes for attacking someone, if someone punches me in the nose, it doesn't matter what the motive, they still punched me in the nose, and deserve the same amount of time for assault. It doesn't matter if they punched me for just standing around or because I'm hispanic. The crime is the same.