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From our November 9, 2000,
edition.
Two
cross burnings shock community
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Two
men were arrested last week after they set two crosses ablaze “as a
joke.”
Max
C. Rippetoe and Joseph M. Shadle were arraigned on disorderly conduct
charges Wednesday, November 1, in front of County Judge Jack Hall.
Chief
Deputy Butch Blackburn said the Donley County Sheriff’s Department
received a call of a possible grass fire at 9:24 p.m. Upon arrival, a
deputy and emergency personnel discovered a burning cross leaning against
a tree in the 200 block of N. Jefferson St.
“It
looked like a big ball of fire,” said Dora Weatherton, whose house was
across the street from the blaze. “We thought it was a grass fire.”
A
deputy later told her the fire was a burning cross, she said. A 40-year
resident of the city, Weatherton said she has never seen anything like
this before.
A
description of a vehicle believed to be involved in the cross burning was
given by neighbors, and a second cross was subsequently found on S.
McClelland St. leaning against a fence across from the car wash.
Both
crosses were constructed of 2x4s and were eight feet high and four feet
wide. Blackburn said the crosses were doused in a flammable liquid. The
second cross only burned off the liquid and did not catch fire.
Blackburn
said neighbors’ accounts and an investigation of tire tracks led to
Rippetoe and Shadle. Warrants were obtained on October 31, and the two men
were arrested that evening at 11:45 p.m. Both signed confessions, and one
of the suspects reportedly stated that they did it as a joke and meant no
harm to anyone.
But
no one is laughing about the matter.
“That
wasn’t funny at all,” Weatherton said. “It’s kinda scary.”
“I
think it’s the poorest joke anybody could pull,” Blackburn said.
“Jokes like this could tear up a community.”
Blackburn
said he had lived here all his life and never heard of this type of
incident happening before.
Local
black businessmen agreed with the deputy.
“There’s
never been an incident like that before,” said former city alderman Mack
Smith, who has lived in Clarendon for 50 years.
“I’m
well aware there’s prejudice around, but it’s never been directed
toward me.”
Smith
said he doesn’t think the incident is funny at all and said he didn’t
think the young men got the attitude from home.
“Sometimes
kids go astray through no fault of the parents,” he said.
Smith
said he thinks the suspects deserve whatever the law does to them.
“I
think it’s terrible,” said 71-year-old Clifford Alexander. “I’ve
never heard of this. It’s bad for the town. Everybody here has been
really getting along.
“I
don’t think nothing like this is funny, especially since the community
has always gotten along. I’ve never had any trouble with anybody.”
Rippetoe,
21, and Shadle, 20, were released last week on $1,500 bond each, Blackburn
said.
Disorderly
conduct is usually a Class C misdemeanor, but the nature of the act falls
under the state hate crimes statute, which makes it a Class B misdemeanor,
he said. That carries a maximum penalty of a $2,000 fine and 180 days in
jail.
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