[Vision2020] Three Indicted on Hate Charges

Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Sat Dec 19 08:31:13 PST 2009


Courtesy of today's (December 19, 2009) Spokesman Review.

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Three indicted on hate charges
Brothers call incident a misunderstanding
Meghann M. Cuniff, The Spokesman-Review

Three brothers accused of harassing a Coeur d’Alene man because of his
ethnicity say they simply asked to buy electrical equipment from the man
and were stunned when he pulled a gun on them.

Ira Gino Tankovich, 47, Frank James Tankovich, 46, and William Michael
Tankovich Jr., 49, were indicted by a grand jury under Idaho’s hate crime
law.

In court Friday, their lawyers characterized the Aug. 16 incident as a
misunderstanding blown out of proportion after Aryan literature was
distributed in Coeur d’Alene.

“I can’t see this case surviving a trial,” said Daniel Cooper, public
defender for Frank Tankovich. “I just can’t fathom a jury returning a
conviction.”

After the defendants chose to remain silent Friday, 1st District Judge
John Luster entered not guilty pleas on charges of malicious harassment
and conspiracy to commit harassment.

Brad Chapman, public defender for Ira Tankovich, said he will ask for the
case to be heard in another county or by an outside jury “due to the
political nature of this proceeding.”

The incident at the home of Kenneth H. Requena in the 1900 block of E.
Pennsylvania Avenue came a week after Coeur d’Alene police ticketed three
self-proclaimed members of the Aryan Nations for littering after they
dropped pamphlets advertising the group in neighborhood yards. The charges
were dropped this month.

Requena, who is Latino, told police his yard had been littered with Aryan
Nations literature and he “felt these men were Aryans and were going to
hurt him,” the police report said.

But the Tankoviches are not members of the Aryan Nations, had nothing to
do with the pamphlets and merely wanted to buy copper wire from Requena,
said Tiffany Tankovich, 21, in court.

“He just pointed a gun at us and said ‘I know who you are,’ ” said
Tiffany Tankovich, William’s daughter. “My dad said ‘I’m sorry. We don’t
want any troubles. We’ll leave.’ ”

Ira Tankovich, who has a star with the word “Aryan” tattooed on his left
calf and a star with the word “pride” tattooed on his right calf, was
arrested that day after Requena and his wife told police he’d been
approached by Tankovich and his brothers in a truck decorated with
swastikas and the words “born to kill.”

The men left after Requena got a gun from his wife, then returned about 20
minutes later with a gun and a pit bull, yelling racial slurs. Requena
told police he asked his wife to bring him a gun from inside the home when
the men first pulled up because “he knew he was about to get a beat down,”
according to a police report.

Police described the Tankoviches as “extremely belligerent” and said they
yelled “countless” racial slurs at Requena after officers were on scene.

An officer said he saw Ira Tankovich throw a gun into a neighboring
driveway. Police recovered a .22-caliber Ruger Mark III pistol belonging
to Ira Tankovich, reports show.

Frank and William Tankovich were arrested in November after a grand jury
indictment. William Tankovich posted $100,000 bail but was jailed Friday
after a judge ruled he’d fraudulently posted a property bond.

Luster later reduced his bond to $70,000, along with Frank Tankovich’s.

William Tankovich’s son, Billy Tankovich, 25, said Friday that the truck
is not decorated with swastikas, and that “born to kill” is a reference to
the family’s hunting hobby.

Ira Tankovich, whose bond remains at $250,000 on the harassment charges,
was convicted of voluntary manslaughter in California in 1990 and is
prohibited from owning firearms. He’s being held on another $250,000 bond
for the weapons charge.

Tiffany Tankovich testified Friday that her father called police when they
got home to report that Requena had pointed at a gun at them unprovoked.
They returned to Requena’s home with a pit bull to make sure police found
the right house, she said.

Kootenai County Prosecutor Barry McHugh said he hadn’t heard about the
call until it came up in court. Police were unavailable for comment late
Friday.

William Tankovich faces up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine.
Prosecutors amended charges against Ira and Frank Tankovich to declare
them habitual offenders, which increases their potential penalty to five
years to life in prison.

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Seeya round town, Moscow.

Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho

"The Pessimist complains about the wind, the Optimist expects it to change
and the Realist adjusts his sails."

- Unknown




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