Police, ambulance and fire crews outside the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church following a shooting incident in Charleston. (Reuters File Photo)
Charleston:
A friend of the gunman accused of slaying nine black parishioners in a 2015 attack on a South Carolina church is expected to plead guilty today to lying to investigators and concealing knowledge of the plan, court documents show.
Joseph Meek, 21, plans to plead guilty to withholding information about a crime and making false statements to authorities investigating the massacre in Charleston, according to the documents filed earlier this week.
Under the terms of a plea agreement, he could be called to testify against his childhood friend Dylann Roof, 22, who has been accused of opening fire during a June 17 Bible study at the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal church.
Meek, who like Roof is white, is the only other person to be charged in connection with the shootings which sparked intense debate about race relations and gun control in the United States.
The plea hearing is scheduled today before US District Judge Richard Gergel in Charleston. By cooperating with authorities, he could be spared the maximum sentence of eight years in prison, four years of supervised release and more than $500,000 in fines.
Meek's father this week told local reporters that his son was not in the wrong, and also was not best friends with Roof.
"If you called 911 every time somebody said, 'OK I'm going to do this, do this,' it'd be flooded with non-legit calls," he told WIS-TV in South Carolina.
Roof faces 33 federal charges including hate crimes, obstruction of religion and firearms offenses. Authorities have accused him of holding white supremacist views, saying he targeted the victims because of their race.
Defense attorneys have said Roof would plead guilty if he did not face the possibility of execution. Roof's federal trial has been repeatedly delayed while US prosecutors decide whether to seek the death penalty.
State authorities are seeking capital punishment against Roof, who is charged with nine counts of murder, as well as attempting to murder three people who survived the rampage, in a trial scheduled to begin in January 2017.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Joseph Meek, 21, plans to plead guilty to withholding information about a crime and making false statements to authorities investigating the massacre in Charleston, according to the documents filed earlier this week.
Under the terms of a plea agreement, he could be called to testify against his childhood friend Dylann Roof, 22, who has been accused of opening fire during a June 17 Bible study at the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal church.
Meek, who like Roof is white, is the only other person to be charged in connection with the shootings which sparked intense debate about race relations and gun control in the United States.
The plea hearing is scheduled today before US District Judge Richard Gergel in Charleston. By cooperating with authorities, he could be spared the maximum sentence of eight years in prison, four years of supervised release and more than $500,000 in fines.
Meek's father this week told local reporters that his son was not in the wrong, and also was not best friends with Roof.
"If you called 911 every time somebody said, 'OK I'm going to do this, do this,' it'd be flooded with non-legit calls," he told WIS-TV in South Carolina.
Roof faces 33 federal charges including hate crimes, obstruction of religion and firearms offenses. Authorities have accused him of holding white supremacist views, saying he targeted the victims because of their race.
Defense attorneys have said Roof would plead guilty if he did not face the possibility of execution. Roof's federal trial has been repeatedly delayed while US prosecutors decide whether to seek the death penalty.
State authorities are seeking capital punishment against Roof, who is charged with nine counts of murder, as well as attempting to murder three people who survived the rampage, in a trial scheduled to begin in January 2017.
© Thomson Reuters 2016
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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