ANM
leader and deputies deny charge of racist arson plot
By
TIM CLARKE
WHITE supremacist
leader Jack Van Tongeren and two of his deputies in
the neo-nazi Australian Nationalist Movement denied
yesterday they were plotting to reprise the group's racist firebombing campaign
against
Van Tongeren, 57, John
Anthony Van Blitterswyk, 53, and Matthew Peter Billing, 33, all appeared in the
WA District Court to plead not guilty to a charge of conspiring to commit arson.
Appearing in the dock
in shackles, Van Tongeren spoke only to plead to the
charge that he and his co-accused conspired to firebomb four Chinese restaurants
in the
All three men were
ordered to appear again in court in June, when a date for their trial will be
discussed.
The men also faced
court on charges of criminal damage and wilfully destroying property, relating
to a poster campaign for the ANM and racist graffiti sprayed on properties all
over
Magistrate Pam Hogan
adjourned those charges to June.
Speaking outside court,
Billing said he was confident they would be acquitted on the conspiracy charges,
saying Van Tongeren posed no threat to the community.
"A lot of you people
demonise him but just because he has an alternative viewpoint does not make him
dangerous," Billing said.
"The case (against us)
is moderate, and they have admitted that, so I can't see it going much further -
I have got every belief we will be found not guilty and acquitted."
Van Tongeren was arrested in August last year when an intensive
manhunt by WA police ended with his arrest in the heart of the Perth CBD
following a tip-off.
Van Blitterswyk and Billing were arrested two weeks later at a
rural property in Bindoon, 100km north of
The court had earlier
been told the nub of the prosecution case would be rollover statements from two
former ANM recruits, Daniel Klavins and Ian "Monty"
Johnson.
Klavins, who has already
admitted to spraying racist graffiti in the name of the group, told police van
Blitterswyk claimed he would "shoot it out" with
anyone who tried to arrest him and intended to "beat Ned Kelly's record of
killing policemen".
The arrests came two
years after Van Tongeren's release from prison
following a 12-year sentence served for organising an anti-Asian campaign, which
included the firebombing of five Chinese restaurants.
The