3 White Mississippi Men Sentenced For Hate Crimes, Including Running Over Black Man

Mississippi Men Sentenced For Hate Crimes
FILE - In this March 21, 2012 file photo, Deryl Dedmon, 19, charged with capital murder in the June 2011 death of 47-year-old James Craig Anderson, a black man, in Jackson, reads a letter to Anderson's family after pleading guilty to murder and committing a hate crime, in Hinds County Circuit Court, in Jackson, Miss. Federal prosecutors have filed a motion to continue the October sentencing of Dedmon and two others convicted of federal hate-crime charges. The motion was filed under seal Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2012 in U.S. District Court in Jackson. Prosecutors asked for the motion to be sealed because it contains information about the defendants' cooperation in the investigation of Anderson's death. Anderson was run over by a pickup truck driven by Dedmon on June 26, 2011, in Jackson. Dedmon was sentenced to two concurrent life sentences in county court. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis, Pool, File)
FILE - In this March 21, 2012 file photo, Deryl Dedmon, 19, charged with capital murder in the June 2011 death of 47-year-old James Craig Anderson, a black man, in Jackson, reads a letter to Anderson's family after pleading guilty to murder and committing a hate crime, in Hinds County Circuit Court, in Jackson, Miss. Federal prosecutors have filed a motion to continue the October sentencing of Dedmon and two others convicted of federal hate-crime charges. The motion was filed under seal Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2012 in U.S. District Court in Jackson. Prosecutors asked for the motion to be sealed because it contains information about the defendants' cooperation in the investigation of Anderson's death. Anderson was run over by a pickup truck driven by Dedmon on June 26, 2011, in Jackson. Dedmon was sentenced to two concurrent life sentences in county court. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis, Pool, File)

(Adds comment from victim's sister)

By Therese Apel

JACKSON, Miss., Feb 10 (Reuters) - Three white men who pleaded guilty in Mississippi to hate crimes that included a black man's death after he was beaten and run over were sentenced in federal court on Tuesday to between seven and 50 years in prison.

The three defendants included Deryl Dedmon, 22, who was driving the truck that ran over James Craig Anderson, killing him in a hotel parking lot in 2011.

Ten people have been convicted in connection with the string of racially motivated attacks that sparked outrage in a state that has struggled to overcome a long history of racism.

"The defendants targeted African-American people they perceived as vulnerable for heinous and violent assaults," U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said in a statement. "These sentences bring a fitting end to the case against these three men."

Dedmon received a 50-year federal prison sentence. He had previously been sentenced in state court to two life sentences.

Co-defendant John Rice, 21, was sentenced to 18-1/2 years in prison, while Dylan Butler, 23, received a seven-year sentence for his role in the attacks.

Seven other defendants are awaiting sentencing.

The three men sentenced on Tuesday, all from suburban Brandon, Mississippi, were among a group that began venturing into Jackson in spring 2011 to harass and attack black people, using weapons that included beer bottles and sling shots, authorities said.

They targeted people believed to be homeless or drunk because they thought such victims would be less likely to report the attacks to the authorities, prosecutors said.

The three were among a mob that ambushed and beat Anderson, 47, in June 2011.

As Anderson lay on the ground after being assaulted, Dedmon shouted "White power" in response to the same exhortation from another of the attackers. Dedmon then got in his truck and deliberately ran Anderson over, fatally wounding him, prosecutors said.

Anderson's sister, Barbara Anderson Young, addressed the defendants at the sentencing.

"Surely the violence you committed shall fall upon your own head," she said. "May God have mercy on your sin-sick souls." (Reporting by Therese Apel; Writing by Jonathan Kaminsky; Editing by Sandra Maler, Eric Beech and Peter Cooney)

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