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Church arsonist sentenced to nine years

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (RNS) The first of three men charged with
torching a black church hours after President Obama's 2008 election was
sentenced to nine years in prison on Monday (Nov. 1) for what the judge
called a "particularly vicious act of stupidity."

Benjamin J. Haskell, 23, of Springfield also must pay a share of
$1.7 million in restitution to the Macedonia Church of God in Christ and
serve three years supervised release after completing his prison term.

"The element of rank, blind stupidity in this act is literally
almost unbelievable," U.S. District Judge Michael A. Ponsor said from
the bench.

"It is especially galling, however, that a crime like this would
take place, not in Mississippi or Alabama, with their troubled
histories, but in our City of Springfield, once a stop on the
Underground Railway and the place where John F. Kennedy announced his
candidacy for president," he added.

Haskell, 23, pleaded guilty in June to a civil rights violation and
destroying religious property. Another Springfield man, Thomas A.
Gleason, Jr., 25, pleaded to the same charges, while Michael F. Jacques,
25, is awaiting trial.

Fueled by a gasoline and Styrofoam mix dubbed homemade napalm, the
fire erupted at 3:10 a.m. on Nov. 5 and quickly engulfed the church,
which was still under construction in a residential neighborhood. The
blaze caused $2 million in damages, sent two firefighters to the
hospital and triggered a federal civil rights investigation that was
monitored by the White House.

Haskell dodged a potentially longer sentence by confessing after
being confronted by state police in early 2009, and participating in a
sting that led to videotaped confessions by his two co-defendants.

Gleason is scheduled for sentencing Dec. 10, while Jacques is
scheduled for trial on March 7.

The church's pastor, Bishop Bryant Robinson Jr., expressed
ambivalence about Haskell's sentencing.

"On one hand, what a waste of a young life; the fact that people
were identified and prosecuted for perpetrating a very despicable crime,
there's a bit of satisfaction in that," he said.

The rebuilt church is expected to open next spring or summer,
according to Robinson.

Jack Flynn

Jack Flynn writes for the Republican in Springfield, Massachusetts.

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