Internet hate-crime case ends in mistrial
November 22, 1997
Web posted at: 12:06 p.m. EST (1706 GMT)
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -- A mistrial was declared Friday in
the federal trial of a man accused of sending threatening
electronic mail messages via the Internet to Asian students
at a southern California university.
U.S. District Court Judge Alicemarie Stotler took the action
in Santa Ana, south of Los Angeles, after the jury said it
was deadlocked in the trial of Richard Machado. It was not
immediately known if he would be re-tried.
Machado, 19, a naturalized U.S. citizen from El Salvador,
was charged with 10 counts of violating a federal law that
makes it a crime to use race, ethnicity or nationality to
interfere with a federally protected activity -- in this
case, attending school.
It was the first such case brought under the federal
hate-crimes legislation.
He allegedly sent threatening e-mail messages last year to
Asian students at the University of California, Irvine.
The former student supposedly blamed Asians for campus crime
and threatened to "hunt down and kill" them.
During the trial, Assistant U.S. Attorney Mavis Lee said
Machado threatened to kill 59 people "solely because of
their race, the color of their skin and their nationality."
She called his e-mail message "hateful, repugnant, degrading
and terrifying."
Machado's court-appointed defender contended he was bored and
sent the message to provoke a response, but had no intention
of carrying out his threat.
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