A white supremacist has been charged as a terrorist for the first time ever in a landmark decision in New York.
James Harris Jackson pleaded guilty to the murder of Timothy Caughman last week; he admitted killing the 66-year-old with a sword as he collected bottles for recycling in March 2017.
The 28-year-old former US soldier, from Baltimore, also admitted prowling the streets of New York in search of black victims in the lead up to the attack.
As reported by the BBC, Jackson travelled to New York on March 17, 2017, and plotted his attack while staying at a Manhattan hotel.
Just three days later, the ex-serviceman began his search for a victim. While walking the streets, police say Jackson wore a long coat to hide his 26in (66cm) Roman style sword.
He spotted Caughman as the older man collected bottles for recycling from rubbish bins, stabbing him in the chest and back before leaving him for dead and fleeing the scene.
Mr Caughman managed to walk into a police station while bleeding, however he later died in hospital from his fatal wounds.
Jackson’s guilty plea makes this case the first ever conviction in the state for Murder in the First Degree in Furtherance of an Act of Terrorism, as well as Murder in the Second Degree as a Crime of Terrorism.
District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr said in a statement that white nationalism will not be normalised, stating instead that murderers will be treated as the ‘terrorist[s] that [they] are’.
District Attorney Vance said:
White nationalism will not be normalized in New York. If you come here to kill New Yorkers in the name of white nationalism, you will be investigated, prosecuted, and incapacitated like the terrorist that you are.You will spend your life in prison without possibility of parole because there is no place in our city or our society for terrorists – ‘domestic’ or otherwise.This resolution won’t bring back Timothy Caughman, a beloved New Yorker who was executed for being black on a midtown street corner. It won’t reverse the alarming rise of white nationalism in America.It is, however, the loudest message that a civil society can send to would-be terrorists, and I thank our prosecutors and the NYPD Detectives whose tireless work enabled us to secure this landmark conviction and send this very loud message today.
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