White Supremacist to Be Charged With Kansas Passover Eve Hate Crimes

Jewish Community Center of Greater Kansas City
Police officers gather at the scene of a shooting at the Jewish Community Center of Greater Kansas City in Overland Park, Kan., Sunday. (Reuters/Dave Kaup )

The suspect in the killings of three people at two Jewish facilities near Kansas City is expected to be charged under hate crime laws on Tuesday as information about his ties to white supremacy groups has emerged, law enforcement officials said.

Frazier Glenn Cross, 73, faces state and federal prosecution on hate crime charges after his arrest on Sunday for a shooting spree on Passover eve that killed a teenager and his grandfather outside a Jewish community center and a woman visiting her mother at a nearby Jewish retirement home.

Both facilities are in Overland Park, Kan., an upscale suburb outside Kansas City, Mo.

"My expectation is that there will be some sort of first appearance and charges filed today," said Overland Park Police spokesman Sean Reilly. Cross is being assigned a public defender, Reilly said.

Cross, who most recently was living in Aurora, Mo., and also goes by the name Frazier Glenn Miller, has a history of hatred of Jewish people and has made comments online about a desire for them to be exterminated, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center and other groups which have tracked his activities over the last several decades.

None of the victims killed Sunday was Jewish. The boy and his grandfather were members of an area Methodist church and the woman attended a Catholic church. But authorities said that does not matter in the filing of hate crime charges. The intent and beliefs of the suspect who committed the acts based upon his beliefs and biases is the key factor, according to law enforcement officials.

The Anti-Defamation League said Cross was one of the "more notorious white supremacists" in the United States in the early 1980s, though his involvement over the last decade has been on the periphery of the white supremacist movement.

The league issued a security bulletin to U.S. synagogues and Jewish communal institutions urging them to review security plans for the Passover holiday that started at sundown Monday.


Reporting by Kevin Murphy in Kansas City and Carey Gillam in Overland Park; Editing by James Dalgleish

© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.


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