British lawmaker's killer gets life

‘You are no patriot,’ trial judge tells white supremacist

Brendan Cox, the husband of slain British lawmaker Jo Cox, speaks outside the courtroom Wednesday in London after Thomas Mair was found guilty of the murder of his wife.
Brendan Cox, the husband of slain British lawmaker Jo Cox, speaks outside the courtroom Wednesday in London after Thomas Mair was found guilty of the murder of his wife.

LONDON -- A white supremacist who shot and stabbed a pro-European U.K. lawmaker while shouting "Britain first" was sentenced to life in prison Wednesday for a crime prosecutors called an act of far-right terrorism.

Jurors at London's Central Criminal Court deliberated for less than two hours before unanimously finding 53-year-old Thomas Mair guilty of murdering Labor Party legislator Jo Cox.

Mair fired three shots at the 41-year-old Cox with a sawed-off.22-caliber rifle and stabbed her 15 times with a 7-inch dagger outside a library in the area she represented in northern England on June 16.

The murder, a week before the United Kingdom's referendum on European Union membership, shocked the country. Cox was the first British lawmaker killed in office in a quarter of a century.

Mair did not visibly react as he was convicted of murdering Cox and wounding 77-year-old Bernard Kenny, a passer-by who was stabbed as he tried to stop the attack in Birstall, 200 miles north of London.

Judge Alan Wilkie sentenced Mair to life with no chance of parole for the "brutal and ruthless" killing.

The judge said the murder had been carried out to advance a political cause "of violent white supremacism associated with Naziism."

Cox, a 41-year-old mother of two young children, had been a prominent voice arguing for Britain to remain in the EU during a divisive and often angry referendum campaign that focused heavily on the issue of immigration. She had also urged the U.K. to take in more refugees fleeing violence in Syria.

At his first court hearing, Mair gave his name as "death to traitors, freedom for Britain." Prosecutors said his home was full of Nazi literature and memorabilia, and his computer revealed an interest in far right, anti-Semitic and neo-Nazi politics.

Mair had refused to enter a plea -- leaving the court to enter an innocent plea on his behalf -- and his lawyers presented no evidence in his defense.

Mair, who did not speak during his trial, asked to address the court after the verdict. The judge refused.

Wilkie said Mair pretended to be motivated by patriotism -- but that Jo Cox was the true patriot.

"You are no patriot," the judge told Mair. "By your actions you have betrayed the quintessence of our country, its adherence to parliamentary democracy."

Mair's inspiration, the judge said, was "not love of country" but "an admiration for Naziism and similar anti-democratic, white supremacist creeds."

Although Mair was not charged under terrorism legislation, officials widely described his crime as an act of terrorism.

Sue Hemming, head of special crime and counterterrorism at the Crown Prosecution Service, said Mair had "offered no explanation for his actions."

But, she added, "the prosecution was able to demonstrate that, motivated by hate, his premeditated crimes were nothing less than acts of terrorism designed to advance his twisted ideology."

Neil Basu, a senior counterterrorism detective, said there are signs the threat from far-right extremism in Britain is growing. He said police would pursue it "with exactly the same level of resource and vigor as other forms of ideology."

Outside court, Cox's widower Brendan Cox said that "as a family, we will not respond to hatred with hatred." He thanked the many people who had sent messages and gestures of support to the family.

"The killing of Jo was a political act, an act of terrorism," Cox said. "But in the history of such acts it was perhaps the most incompetent and self-defeating: an act driven by hatred which instead created an outpouring of love."

In an interview with the BBC, Cox's widower said that he asked friends to write down memories of his late wife, who was a longtime charity worker before she became a member of Parliament in 2015. He said that he often reads the stories to his children in the evening.

"They love them," he said. "They love the exciting ones, the dangerous ones, the adventurous ones, the funny ones. And there's lots and lots of stories. We have a lifetime of stories. Jo packed in 80 or 90 years into the 40 she lived."

Information for this article was contributed by Jill Lawless of The Associated Press and by Karla Adam of The Washington Post.

A Section on 11/24/2016

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