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Poster boys for the summer of hate
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Oct. 6, 1999 | REDDING, Calif. --
"Um, I don't, I don't think you did what they say you did," she told
31-year-old Benjamin Matthew Williams. "What do they say I did?" her son asked through the telephone handset. "They say you took out two homos," she said in her soft whisper. "Huh!" he shot back in a strong and certain voice, as if to boast. Then he
asked: "Why wouldn't you think I'd do that?" Why wouldn't anyone? Since Williams' arrest in early July along with his
younger brother, James Tyler Williams, 29, the two young Northern
California men became poster boys for the summer of hate this country just
endured. Both men have been charged in the July 1 double slaying of Gary
Matson, 50, and Winfield Mowder, 40, a prominent gay couple who lived near
Redding in the rural community of Happy Valley, about 180 miles north of
Sacramento. The men also are the prime suspects in the wave of arsons that hit three
Sacramento-area synagogues two weeks before the killings, and caused more
than $1 million in damage. And they also are being looked at as
potential suspects in an arson at a Sacramento-area abortion clinic two
weeks after the synagogue fires. The pair, both of whom are known by their middle names, have pleaded not
guilty to the murders, the only formal charges they currently face. The FBI says it is still investigating the brothers' ties to the arsons, but there seems to be no hurry to file charges -- perhaps understandably, since the brothers could face the death penalty in the murder trial. Matson and Mowder, the murder victims, were widely admired in this
conservative area for their civic good deeds and the many hours they spent
sharing their knowledge of gardening with anyone interested. Their deaths
were grisly: First, one was apparently forced to record a new message for
their answering machine, claiming they were sick and had gone to San Francisco
to see a doctor. The voice on the machine feigned illness, investigators
say, but sounded distressed. In the background, another voice could be
heard saying, "Just calm down." They were then forced into their platform bed, which rose seven feet above
the floor of their bedroom. From the way the bodies were found and the
bloody mess left behind, investigators said the killer or killers stood on
chairs at the end of the bed and blasted away at the men. Their nude
bodies were discovered by Gary Matson's brother, Roger, who had been
dispatched to their home by their father after he heard the odd-sounding
telephone message and became worried. When the Williams brothers were arrested a week later, one was wearing a
bullet-proof vest and both were heavily armed. They also happened to be
picking up a crate of ammunition re-loading equipment that had been shipped
to a mail drop, and paid for by Matson's credit card, within hours of the
shootings. Searches of their homes and storage sheds turned up a notebook
in which one had practiced signing Matson's name, according to documents filed
by prosecutors in the case, as well as a treasure trove of
white-supremacist, anti-gay and anti-Semitic literature. Investigators also found a "hit list" of 32 prominent Jewish and civic
leaders in the Sacramento area, apparently compiled after the synagogue
fires. Then, after a Jewish businessman offered a $10,000 reward in the
arsons, one had written a note that read: "Yidbizman, $10,000 on us." Unlike in Littleton, Colo., where investigators say they may never know why
two high-achieving teenagers killed 12 classmates and a teacher and hoped to
blow up their entire high school, Matthew Williams is still alive and
seems eager to explain his beliefs. "My brother and I were captured by occupation storm troopers while we were
on a supply mission," he wrote in a letter from jail that was part of a
credit card application. "We are now incarcerated for our work in
cleansing a sick society." | ||
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