DOJ’s Charlottesville Hate Crime Probe Extends Beyond Driver

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The Justice Department’s hate crime investigation of Saturday’s incident in Charlottesville, Va. is not limited just to James Alex Fields Jr., the 20-year-old man charged with second-degree murder after allegedly running over a woman demonstrating against white supremacists.

A Department of Justice official familiar with the hate crime investigation says that the agency is looking into whether others individuals were involved in the attack, which occurred around mid-day Saturday after local police broke up a white supremacist rally being held near a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee.

Video recordings showed a 2010 Dodge Challenger registered to Fields plowing into a crowd of anti-fascist counter-protesters in downtown Charlottesville.

Heather Heyer, a 32-year-old paralegal, was killed in what police say was a deliberate attack. As many as 19 other people were injured.

There has been no indication yet that Fields coordinated the attack with someone else.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced late Saturday that the Justice Department and FBI would be investigating the incident as domestic terrorism and as a hate crime.

The investigation will be conducted in Charlottesville as well as Maumee, Ohio, where Fields is from.

The Justice Department official said that Fields’ motive is not entirely clear, though the agency has enough evidence to warrant suspicion that he engaged in domestic terrorism. Evidence suggests that Fields intended both to hurt people and send a message to counter-protesters, the official said.

People who know Fields have said that he has embraced white supremacist ideology for years. One of Fields’ teachers told WCPO News in Cincinnati that he was obsessed with Adolf Hitler and Nazis.

Thousands of white supremacists, Alt-Right supporters, neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klam attended Saturday’s rally. Nazi flags and armbands were prominent at the gathering, which was dubbed “Unite the Right.”

Fields also attempted to join the Army in Aug. 2015, just after high school. An Army spokesperson said that he attended boot camp but left the military in Dec. 2015 for failing to meet training standards.

Fields’ teacher said that he did not proceed further because of mental health issues.

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