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<TD align=right><FONT face="tahoma, sans-serif" size=2>Wednesday,
May 23, 2007</FONT></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><BR>
<DIV class=label>Spokane</DIV>
<H2>Shooter had Aryan Nations ties</H2>
<H4 class=deck></H4>
<P class=byline><SPAN class=name>Taryn Brodwater, Bill Morlin and Amy
Cannata</SPAN><BR>Staff writers<BR>May 23, 2007</P>
<P>Jason Kenneth Hamilton, the man responsible for the deadly shooting spree in
Moscow, Idaho, was a card-carrying Aryan Nations member licensed by the federal
government to possess fully automatic weapons, including a military-style
machine gun, sources confirmed Tuesday.</P>
<P>“How he got one, I have no idea,” Latah County Sheriff Wayne Rausch said
Tuesday of Hamilton’s license from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives. Rausch confirmed that Hamilton also had a concealed weapons permit
in Latah County, despite a domestic violence conviction that should have barred
him from owning guns.</P>
<P>The 36-year-old janitor moved to North Idaho from the Boise area in 1998 or
1999, and shortly thereafter became a member of the Aryan Nations, which was
based in Hayden.</P>
<P>About that same time, Hamilton was arrested in Latah County for shooting at a
building or a car, but the charge was reduced through a plea bargain, incomplete
court records show.</P>
<P>Hamilton committed suicide in a Presbyterian church after killing his wife, a
police officer and a church sexton and wounding three other men Saturday night
and early Sunday morning.</P>
<P>Law enforcement authorities confirmed Tuesday that Hamilton was a member of
the Aryan Nations.</P>
<P>“He never really hit on our radar,” one source said of Hamilton’s involvement
with the white supremacy group that was closely monitored during the
quarter-century it was headquartered in North Idaho.</P>
<P>“We don’t think he’s been particularly active, but he’s been a dues-paying
member since 2000,” said the source, who asked not to be identified.</P>
<P>Hamilton’s ties to the Aryan Nations were found when FBI agents and Latah
County sheriff’s deputies searched his home in Moscow, sources told The
Spokesman-Review.</P>
<P>Authorities found an Aryan Nations membership card and an Aryan Nations flag
that belonged to Hamilton in his house on Juliene Way on the outskirts of
Moscow, the sources said.</P>
<P>Investigators believe the Aryan Nations material belonged to Hamilton and not
his wife, who was found dead in the home. A single round from a .308 rifle – the
same caliber as the M-1 military-type rifle Hamilton was carrying – was
responsible for the woman’s death, a source said. </P>
<P>Hamilton has been a dues-paying member of the Aryan Nations since four years
before the death of Aryan Nations founder Richard Butler at his Hayden home.
</P>
<P>The Aryan Nations headquarters was moved to Alabama following Butler’s death,
and white supremacy activities, including an annual parade in Coeur d’Alene,
largely subsided in North Idaho.</P>
<P>Hamilton had an extensive criminal history in Idaho, Arizona, California and
Oklahoma, including arrests for violent crimes, domestic battery and drugs,
according to court records obtained Tuesday by The Spokesman-Review.</P>
<P>Court records indicate the high school dropout, who received a GED from the
University of Idaho about seven years ago, was first arrested in California for
a domestic violence charge soon after his 21st birthday.</P>
<P>Hamilton’s first contact with Latah County authorities was in 1999, when he
was charged with unlawful discharge of a firearm at a building or vehicle and
two misdemeanor counts of disturbing the peace. An arrest report was not
immediately available Tuesday, and Rausch said he was not familiar with the
case. The court file no longer existed, a clerk said, but court records show he
was placed on unsupervised probation for two years.</P>
<P>He was arrested in September 2005 for attempted strangulation of his
on-again, off-again girlfriend. A jury convicted Hamilton of a reduced charge of
misdemeanor domestic battery in June 2006.</P>
<P>As he was awaiting trial, he was arrested for allegedly grabbing another
woman by the hands and throwing her to the floor, injuring her. The case was
dismissed.</P>
<P>Prior to moving to Latah County, Hamilton was charged with felony aggravated
assault in 1992 in Lake Havasu, Ariz., and placed on probation. He was charged a
few months later with possession of marijuana and driving with a suspended
license; both charges were dismissed.</P>
<P>Hamilton was arrested in 1995 by the Tulsa, Okla., city police on a cruelty
to animals charge that was reduced to malicious injury. He was sentenced to a
year in jail, but the sentence was suspended.</P>
<P>In 1996, he was arrested by the Boise Police Department for marijuana
possession and failure to have current insurance. He pleaded guilty and was
ordered to pay $251.50 in court costs and fines and complete 16 hours of drug
treatment. Hamilton, who was living in Kuna, Idaho, paid his fines in two
monthly payments while working for a Meridian pizza parlor.</P>
<P>A new life for Crystal</P>
<P>It’s unclear when Hamilton married Crystal Dawn Jones. Together, they moved
from the Kuna area to Latah County.</P>
<P>Crystal Hamilton recently had launched a new chapter in her life. Just weeks
before her murder, she started a part-time job assisting with fiscal
record-keeping at the Washington State University Edward R. Murrow School of
Communication – even as she continued her custodial job at the Latah County
Courthouse.</P>
<P>“She was trying to build a promising future for herself by building office
skills and creating abilities that would give her more options in life,” said
Erica Austin, the school’s interim director.</P>
<P>Austin said Hamilton made a big impact in her short time working at the
school.</P>
<P>“When she was in the office working with me she was really focused on the
work. She was cheerful and dedicated,” Austin said.</P>
<P>Hamilton had several pets, including a dog, cat, birds and fresh- and
saltwater fish. All have been taken on by a friend and co-worker at the
communication school. Employees there are taking up a collection to help pay for
the animals’ upkeep and have opened an account at the Washington State Employees
Credit Union for the purpose.</P>
<P>The school is offering counseling to any of its students or employees who
might need help dealing with the shooting and its aftermath.</P>
<P>Austin said she and others at the office didn’t realize Hamilton was having
problems with her husband.</P>
<P>“It’s heartbreaking to think that there might have been something we could
have done had we known,” she said.</P>
<P>The Latah County Courthouse, the initial building targeted during the weekend
shooting rampage, reopened for business Tuesday morning. Bullet holes scar the
outer brick walls, windows and walls inside the building.</P>
<P>Many of the employees who returned to work Tuesday had red-rimmed eyes,
Rausch said.</P>
<P>“It takes a while for the emotional baggage to go away,” he said.</P>
<P>The sheriff said the staff first returned to the building Monday evening. As
the temperature outside dropped, glass in one of the damaged windows fell out
and crashed to the ground.</P>
<P>“Two dispatchers hit the floor, screaming,” Rausch said. “Another ran off. It
sounded like incoming again.”</P>
<P>Looking for patterns</P>
<P>Extremist shootings tend to fall into one of two categories – suspects who
target individuals because of their ethnicity or religion, and those who want to
make an anti-government statement, said Mark Pitcavage, director of
investigative research for the Anti-Defamation League.</P>
<P>Former Aryan Nations security guard Buford Furrow, who went on a shooting
spree in Los Angeles in 1999, was an example of a gunman who targeted specific
victims, Pitcavage said.</P>
<P>Furrow was arrested for killing an Asian postal carrier and firing an assault
rifle in a Jewish day care center in Los Angeles.</P>
<P>Police officers and government buildings frequently are targets of those
driven by an anti-government agenda.</P>
<P>Pitcavage cited the case of Carl Drega, a New Hampshire extremist who became
upset about a zoning issue and killed two state troopers, a judge and a
newspaper editor before dying in a shootout with police in Vermont.</P>
<P>The Latah County Courthouse and police dispatch center in Moscow were the
targets of some of Hamilton’s bullets, but Pitcavage said he didn’t know enough
to speculate if an anti-government agenda motivated the shooter.</P>
<P>“I don’t have all the details on the incident,” he said. “When the news first
came out, I was thinking that was a possible. </P>
<P>“But killing his wife first doesn’t really fit into this pattern,” he
said.</P>
<P>“It might not have anything to do with an anti-government ideology, and might
have to do more with his personal situation,’’ Pitcavage said.</P>
<P></P>
<P>Staff writer Betsy Z. Russell contributed to this
report.</P></DIV></BODY></HTML>