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		Driver who killed woman at Virginia rally 
		may have felt threatened: witness 
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		 [December 06, 2018] 
		By Gary Robertson 
 (Reuters) - Lawyers for the white 
		nationalist on trial for murder after plowing his car into a crowd 
		protesting a right-wing rally in Virginia began their case on Wednesday 
		with testimony to back up his defense that he felt endangered by the 
		counterprotesters.
 
 James Fields, 21, does not dispute being at the wheel of the car that 
		killed a woman and injured others protesting the "Unite the Right" rally 
		in Charlottesville on Aug. 12, 2017. But he has said he acted in 
		self-defense, and his lawyers called on the testimony of other men who 
		said they felt intimidated.
 
 Edmund Davidson, a knife maker from Goshen, Virginia, testified that 
		when he attended the rally, counterprotesters were shouting "Punch them 
		in the face" and carrying signs that read "This machine kills fascists."
 
 The violent chaos at the rally became a pivotal moment in the resurgence 
		of white nationalist fringe groups in the United States.
 
		
		 
		
 Another defense witness, Hayden Calhoun, said he met Fields for the 
		first time the night before the car incident, as men marched with 
		torches and chanted anti-Semitic slogans in a park. He said he also 
		feared being attacked by counterprotesters.
 
 "The area had erupted in violence," Calhoun testified. "There was a 
		brawl going on. Tear gas had been deployed."
 
 Calhoun said he and his girlfriend, who attended the rally with him, 
		decided to walk with Fields and a fourth rally attendee for safety in 
		numbers. He described Field's demeanor the night before he drove into 
		the crowd as "calm, tired."
 
 In cross-examination, Calhoun told prosecutors that, despite their 
		fears, there were "no physical attacks" on Calhoun or the other people 
		with him.
 
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			James Alex Fields Jr., (L) is seen attending the "Unite the Right" 
			rally in Emancipation Park before being arrested by police and 
			charged with charged with one count of second degree murder, three 
			counts of malicious wounding and one count of failing to stop at an 
			accident that resulted in a death after police say he drove a car 
			into a crowd of counter-protesters later in the afternoon in 
			Charlottesville, Virginia, U.S., August 12, 2017. REUTERS/Eze 
			Amos/File Photo 
            
 
            Fields was one of hundreds of white nationalists who descended on 
			Charlottesville that week to protest the planned removal from a 
			public park of a statue honoring the U.S. Civil War-era Confederacy.
 Earlier this week, jurors heard that the day before going to 
			Charlottesville, Fields exchanged cellphone text messages with his 
			mother suggesting the counterprotesters would "need to be careful," 
			and sent her an image of Adolf Hitler.
 
 After his arrest, Fields broke down in tears at the police station 
			upon learning he had killed someone, according to video footage 
			shown to the jury.
 
 Fields, faces 10 charges for his role in the violence, including 
			murder, which carries a maximum sentence of life in prison if he is 
			convicted.
 
 Fields also faces separate federal hate crime charges, which carry a 
			potential death sentence. He has pleaded not guilty in that case as 
			well.
 
 (Writing by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Frank McGurty, Jonathan Oatis 
			and Richard Chang)
 
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