When Raymond “Chuck” Foster and other members of a Klan crew out of St. Tammany Parish, LA called the Dixie Brotherhood were arrested for the murder of Cynthia Lynch, a new recruit from Tulsa Oklahoma that tried to get out of the group, St. Tammany Parish Sheriff Jack Strain said, “The IQ level of this group is not impressive, to be kind.” Well Foster’s IQ points might have gone up a tick or two because he was smart enough to realize that it was not worth dragging this out in court and pled guilty to killing Lynch. He will now spend the rest of his life in prison, and other members of his group are either serving or looking at some sort of punishment for their role in either the killing or the coverup. St. Tammany Parish has had it’s problems in the past, most notably the fact that its Republican Party had David Duke as it’s elected head for years. But this crew was so much of an embarrasment to just about everyone who had to deal with them, even one guy over at Stormfront call them “punks masquerading as KKK”. The problem is this masquerade got someone killed.
Associated Press
COVINGTON, La. – The leader of a Ku Klux Klan group in Louisiana pleaded guilty Wednesday to killing an Oklahoma woman — an erratic recruit who a witness said yelled “I want out” the day after her initiation.
Raymond Foster, 49, of Bogalusa, was immediately sentenced to life in prison for second-degree murder by state District Judge Peter Garcia.
Cynthia Lynch, 43, a Klan recruit from Tulsa, Okla., was shot and killed in November 2008, the day after initiation rites in rural St. Tammany Parish, about 50 miles north of New Orleans.
Frankie Stafford, a former member of the Klan group, testified Monday that Lynch cried tears of joy the night of her initiation but the next day angrily cursed Foster and yelled “I want out” before Foster shot her to death.
After entering his plea Wednesday, Foster’s voice was shaky as he apologized to Lynch’s mother, Virginia Lynch, who was in the courtroom’s front row. She had been present throughout jury selection and Stafford’s testimony and wept at times as prosecutors outlined the crime.
“I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me,” he said.
The plea came on the second day of what was often gruesome testimony. Defense lawyer Kevin Linder said he believes Foster decided to plead guilty so he could spare his friends, family and Virginia Lynch the ordeal of sitting through a full trial.
“I think seeing Ms. Lynch’s mother in the courtroom definitely had an impact on his emotional state,” Linder said.
About a half dozen of Foster’s family and friends approached Virginia Lynch, offered condolences and embraced her after Foster was led out of the courtroom.
“She’s got her justice,” Virginia Lynch said later, while expressing sympathy for Foster’s family. “I’m happy he’s going to prison in one way and I’m sad in another.”
In his opening statement, Assistant District Attorney Joseph Oubre said there was some question whether Lynch knew what the Klan stood for. He noted that she had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, characterized by severe mood swings.
Defense attorneys had asked potential jurors to set aside whatever ill feelings they might have for the Klan and judge the case strictly on facts. As they sought a lesser verdict than second-degree murder, they elicited testimony from Stafford about Lynch’s wide-ranging mood swings. He said she was intermittenly cheerful and angry, given at times to outbursts of blistering obscenities, including an hour-long tirade against Foster that preceded the shooting.
The defense suggested that Foster, a short, rotund man, might have felt physically threatened by the 6-foot, 200 pound woman and fired in self defense; that he might not have intended to kill her; or that he killed her in a sudden flash of anger after her repeated cursing and screaming at him.
Stafford testified Tuesday that he had planned to rejoin Foster’s group, and gave a chilling account of Lynch’s death. He said he helped cut down and burn bloodstained bushes at the scene but balked at helping dig a bullet out of her body.
Stafford is serving a four-year obstruction of justice sentence after pleading guilty to helping try to cover up the crime.
The killing happened just south of Washington Parish, a hotbed of Klan activity decades ago. St. Tammany Parish District Attorney Walter Reed said Foster’s Klan group was small and secretive and its existence was an embarrassment to both parishes. Holding an evidence photo showing Foster, Lynch and others in Klan robes, he said, “I hope the result here will tell the world that this will not be tolerated in our community.”
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