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Winnipeg Free Press By: James McCarten, The Canadian Press Posted:
Last Modified: 3:49 PM CST Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021 Save to Read Later
WASHINGTON - A Maryland judge batted away a volley of motions Tuesday aimed at undermining the case against a former Canadian Forces reservist who allegedly hoped to trigger a race war in the United States.
WASHINGTON - A Maryland judge batted away a volley of motions Tuesday aimed at undermining the case against a former Canadian Forces reservist who allegedly hoped to trigger a race war in the United States.
Only two of the motions filed on behalf of alleged neo-Nazi Patrik Mathews one to dismiss two of the four charges he faces, the other to suppress his statements survived the day.
James McCarten
Patrik Mathews is shown in an undated RCMP handout photo. The lawyer for Mathews is trying to contest some of the evidence against the former Canadian Forces reservist and alleged neo-Nazi. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-RCMP MANDATORY CREDIT February 16, 2021 - 1:49 PM
WASHINGTON - A Maryland judge batted away a volley of motions Tuesday aimed at undermining the case against a former Canadian Forces reservist who allegedly hoped to trigger a race war in the United States.
Only two of the motions filed on behalf of alleged neo-Nazi Patrik Mathews â one to dismiss two of the four charges he faces, the other to suppress his statements â survived the day.
A lot of talk : warrants violated Patrik Mathews rights, lawyer argues
by The Canadian Press
Last Updated Feb 16, 2021 at 12:14 pm EDT
WASHINGTON The lawyer for Patrik Mathews is trying to contest some of the evidence against the former Canadian Forces reservist and alleged neo-Nazi.
Joseph Balter is also urging a Maryland judge to throw out two of the four charges faced by his client.
Mathews and his co-accused, Brian Lemley Jr., took part in a motions hearing today aimed at convincing District Court Judge Theodore Chuang to quash what they call prejudicial evidence.
Balter says much of the wiretap, email and location evidence is prejudicial against Mathews and that the search warrants violated his constitutional rights.