Calgary man with neo-Nazi ties gets life in prison for savage beating death
CALGARY — A founding member of a white supremacist group in Calgary has been sentenced to life in prison for the random killing of an ailing man.
CALGARY — A founding member of a white supremacist group in Calgary has been sentenced to life in prison for the random killing of an ailing man.
Self-proclaimed white supremacist Rob Reitmeier has been found guilty of second-degree murder by a jury in the 2010 beating death of Calgary man Mark Mariani.
A man with ties to a neo-Nazi group pleaded guilty to second degree murder in the beating death of Mark Mariani.
After a while, even the anniversary of a murder can seem routine. Or at least that's the impression the mayor of Mölln, a city of 18,000 in Germany's northernmost state of Schleswig-Holstein, appears to give. "You're the third or fourth interviewer I've had today," Jan Wiegels said, somewhat annoyed. "Every year a press caravan descends on our city and stirs up a bunch of old dust." "Stirring up dust:" In Mölln's case the "dust" was an event which, at least in German memories, is linked indelibly to the city's name.
CALGARY - Fingerprints, fibres and DNA are perhaps the more typical evidence left behind at homicide scenes.
2 arrested in year-old Calgary murder: photos
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The Department of Homeland Security report April 2009
Rightwing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment
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