Former soldier, alleged neo-Nazi Patrik Mathews denied bail in U.S.
GREENBELT, Md. — A former Canadian army reservist and his two American cohorts, all of them tied to a white-supremacy group with growing notoriety in the United States, remained behind bars Wednesday over a thwarted plot to allegedly kill blacks and Jews, derail trains and trigger a race war in the name of creating a white “ethno-state.”
Patrik Mathews sat stone-faced throughout his detention hearing in a Maryland courtroom, where U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Sullivan spent the morning contemplating the balance between the safety of the American public and the accused’s right to freedom of expression.
“You can’t get more serious than murder,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Windom, who described the plot as nothing less than a plan to commit acts of domestic terrorism. “You can’t get more serious than inciting civil disobedience. That’s exactly what Mr. Mathews was planning to do.”
Sullivan ultimately ordered Mathews, 27, held until a preliminary hearing can be held for the trio, scheduled for Jan. 30.