Black Suspect Arrested, Charged in Connection w 7 Black Church Arsons - judge sentenced him to 120 days of “shock time” in jail

voiceofreason

Senior News Editor since 2011
Re: Arsons At 6 Black Churches In St. Louis Area Are Linked...To A Negro

http://stlouis.cbslocal.com/2015/10/30/police-suspect-arrested-in-connection-with-church-arsons/


Police: Suspect Arrested, Charged in Connection with Church Arsons
October 30, 2015 11:47 AM

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ST. LOUIS (KMOX) – (UPDATED 3:51 p.m.) St. Louis police announced during a Friday news conference that David Lopez Jackson has been arrested and charged in connection with a recent string of North St. Louis church fires.
 
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St Louis police arrest suspect in arson cases at mostly black churches​

This article is more than 8 years old

    • Suspect is 35-year-old African American male, police say
    • Officers had been puzzled by string of fires for weeks

    Ryan Felton in Detroit
    Fri 30 Oct 2015 18.14 EDTFirst published on Fri 30 Oct 2015 13.12 EDT

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...rson-black-churches-suspect-arrested#comments

    St Louis police have arrested an individual in connection with a spate of arson cases at predominantly black churches.
    The suspect, a 35-year-old black male, was taken into custody on Thursday, said Schron Jackson, spokesperson for the St Louis police department.


    In this Sunday, Oct. 18, 2015 photo, Deacon Clinton McMiller, left, and Pastor David Triggs carry a cabinet back into the church after an outdoor service due to a fire at the New Life Missionary Baptist Church in St. Louis. Someone has been setting fire to predominantly black churches in the St. Louis area, and investigators are trying to determine if the arsonist is targeting either religion or race. (J.B. Forbes/St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP)  EDWARDSVILLE INTELLIGENCER OUT; THE ALTON TELEGRAPH OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT
    Church leaders 'expected more of a response' to spate of fires near Ferguson

    Read more
    “If/when warrants are issued, we [will] release a booking photo and warrant information,” Jackson told the Guardian. The St Louis Post-Dispatch first reported the arrest and, citing an unnamed police source, said the suspect may receive criminal charges as early as Friday afternoon.

    Police officials later announced at a press conference Friday that St Louis resident David Lopez Jackson was charged with two counts of second-degree arson in the fires at Ebenezer Lutheran Church and New Life Missionary Baptist Church. Both occurred on October 17. The 35-year-old was ordered held by a judge on a $75,000 cash only bond.

    Cautioning that the investigation is ongoing, St Louis police chief Sam Dotson said at a press conference on Friday: “Hopefully more charges will be coming.”

    Jackson is considered a suspect in the other incidents, Dotson said.

    david lopez jackson

    David Lopez Jackson Photograph: St Louis police department
    The weekslong investigation has shown no indication of a hate crime or that any religious or ethic group was targeted in the arsons, according to the federal bureau of alcohol, tobacco, firearms and explosives, which has led the joint-investigation with the St Louis regional bomb and arson unit, along with the St Louis fire department fire investigation unit.

    “Arson is a violent crime,” said Gregory Gant, ATF Kansas City field division special agent in charge, in a statement. “ATF views an arson attack against a house of worship as an attack on not just a building, but against a community. We work shoulder to shoulder with our state and local partners to bring those responsible to justice.”

    Law enforcement officials have said the fires have been “relatively small in nature”, with similar details found in each. The churches are within a few miles of each other, near Ferguson, Missouri – however, officials have cautioned that it’s too early in the investigation to speculate on whether the incidents are related to the fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was killed last year by Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson. A grand jury later declined to bring charges against Wilson.


    Nonetheless, parishioners and officials described the string of incidents that began 8 October as a “disturbing pattern”, given that the majority African American churches are clustered in an area near Ferguson. The alleged arsonist apparently deviated from the pattern last week, however, when a historic church near downtown with a predominately white congregation was hit by a minor fire.

    The rash of fires for weeks puzzled investigators, who said it was “frustrating” not to have a suspect or motive.

    A minister of an affected church told the Guardian he sensed “lethargy” in his community on the city’s north side, as he anticipated “more of a response” from the faith community to the fires.

    “A number of the congregation are people who lived through an era where church fires were not taken seriously by the authorities,” the Rev Rodrick Burton told the Guardian, describing the New Northside Missionary Baptist church’s working-class neighborhood. “I got folks from Arkansas, my mother’s from Alabama; for some of the people, they’re waiting to see what is the motivation [behind the fires].”

    It’s too early to tell if race has played a part in the alleged arsonist’s motive, Burton said.

    “But I say that it could’ve [done more] for race relations in this area … if people in the majority culture reached out and said, ‘We’re concerned about this happening in the African American community,’” he said.

    Burton was heartened, however, by the response from the one majority white church affected by the fires, Shrine of St Joseph.

    On Sunday, the Reverend Dale Wunderlich asked congregants to consider a donation for the other damaged churches on the city’s north side, most of which lacked insurance to cover the cost of repairs. Volunteers passed out collection baskets that were promptly filled.

    “We are now part of a bigger picture,” the St Louis resident told his congregation at the beginning of service on Sunday.

    He added: “It seems to me that we can’t sit back and do nothing.”

 

Suspect Charged With Setting St. Louis Church Fires​

Judge Edward Sweeney sentenced him to 120 days of “shock time” in jail, which he served from March through June, to be followed by four years of supervised probation.

By Christine Byers

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Nov 2, 2015

David Lopez Jackson, 35, was charged Oct. 30 with setting two in a string of seven church fires this month, but authorities say they don’t know the motive.


The charges were two counts of second-degree arson. Jackson was being held in lieu of $75,000 bail, according to court documents.


Forensic evidence linked him to the fire on Oct. 18 at Ebenezer Lutheran Church; video of his car near New Life Missionary Baptist Church, links him to the fire there on Oct. 17, police Chief Sam Dotson said. Both churches are in the city of St. Louis.


A container of gasoline and a Thermos bottle that smelled of gasoline were found in his car, Dotson said.


Asked about a motive, Dotson said, “We’re still trying to understand that.”


Dotson did not specifically accuse Jackson of the other church fires but said he was a suspect and suggested that further investigation might result in additional charges for additional crimes.


Although the locations of the fires in predominantly African American neighborhoods gave rise to speculation that the motive might be race-related, Jackson is black.


He also is reported to be suspected of trying to burn a relative’s home in Jennings, a source said. Police responded to a call for an attempted arson there shortly after 4 p.m. Oct. 29. St. Louis County police responded to the same location for a report of a “suspicious odor” on Oct. 24.


The Jennings address, which is listed as Jackson’s home in some court records and is where he was arrested, is in the area of the first six fires — about two blocks from the closest.


Jackson’s criminal record dates to 1998, when he was arrested and charged with unlawful use of a weapon. He has also been charged with domestic assault, burglary, drug-related crimes, resisting arrest, and assaulting a police officer.



Court records indicate that he was ordered to undergo a mental health evaluation, and an order of protection was sought against him to stay out of the city’s Wells Goodfellow neighborhood in 2009.


In August 2014, Jackson admitted to kicking in the back door of a home and stealing two lanterns, according to court documents.


He most recently pleaded guilty in January of first-degree property damage and assaulting a police officer in St. Louis stemming from an incident in October 2014. Jackson admitted breaking multiple windows at the Crocodile Lounge by throwing rocks at them, according to court documents.

Judge Edward Sweeney sentenced him to 120 days of “shock time” in jail, which he served from March through June, to be followed by four years of supervised probation.


Police said Jackson had become a suspect before the seventh fire, in downtown St. Louis, miles from the others, given his criminal record and proximity to most of the fire scenes.


The string of fires, many of which did minimal damage, drew attention of local and federal investigators.


The Rev. Robert Gettinger, of St. Augustine Catholic Church, said news of an arrest was a relief.


“We pray for the person who has done this. It seems to be mentally off-balance behavior,” Gettinger said.


The Rev. Roderick K. Burton, of New Northside Missionary Baptist Church in Jennings, said the congregation was waiting to repair its doors after the Oct. 10 fire until a suspect was in custody. Church members did not want the community to forget that an arsonist was on the loose, he said.


On a message board on the front lawn of the church, scripture often is quoted. Burton decided the message on the board should be “church fires must stop” after New Northside was struck Oct. 10.


“I’m looking forward to changing the sign to ‘church fires have stopped,’ ” Burton said. He said he was always confident the culprit would be caught.


“I feel like it’s an answer to prayer. The whole metropolitan area can breathe a sigh of relief. We’re very thankful that the fires didn’t hurt anyone physically. Everyone will be very interested in finding out the motivation.”


St. Augustine was damaged Oct. 14, the third church targeted by arson. The other fires happened Oct. 8 at the Bethel Nondenominational Church in Jennings; Oct. 15 at the New Testament Church of Christ in St. Louis; and Oct. 22 at the Shrine of St. Joseph.


The final fire, at the historic shrine downtown, appeared to break the arsonist’s geographical pattern.


The variety of denominations and types of structures targeted included Catholic, Lutheran, Baptist, and nondenominational congregations — four on the north side of St. Louis and two in Jennings. They ranged from the relatively grandiose historic brick structures of St. Augustine Catholic Church and Ebenezer Lutheran Church to the modest storefront used by the New Testament Church of Christ.


The first six churches were within about five miles of each other, and sustained varying levels of damage from fires set at their front doors from Oct. 8 to 18. Mainly, the damage was contained. Police presumed they were the work of the same person or people.


The fires were small blazes set against the exterior doors, but in some cases spread.
 
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