Mississippi man who burned cross to intimidate Black neighbors pleads guilty to hate crime

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By Minyvonne Burke, NBC News

A Mississippi man is convicted of burning a cross in his front yard to threaten a Black family. (Guenther Gassler/Getty Images/EyeEm)

A Mississippi man pleaded guilty to a federal hate crime after he burned a cross in his front yard to intimidate his Black neighbors.

Axel Cox, 24, of Gulfport, admitted that on Dec. 3, 2020, he gathered supplies from his home, made them into a wooden cross and propped it up in his yard so his neighbors could see it, the Justice Department said in a news release Friday.

He then doused the cross with motor oil and set it on fire. Cross-burning was used in the Jim Crow era by the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacist groups as a form of racial intimidation of Black people.

“Cox admitted that he burned the cross because of the victims’ race and because they were occupying a home next to his,” the release stated.

He also admitted to using threatening and racially derogatory remarks toward the family, prosecutors said. The neighbors are only identified by their initials in the court documents.

NBC has the jury’s decision.

Mass shootings and hate crimes have encouraged more Black Americans to own guns.

Find more stories like this.

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