Murder of Cha Vang

Cha Vang was a 30-year-old Hmong man from Green Bay, who was murdered by James Nichols in 2007.[1] Cha Vang was found shot and stabbed, his corpse hidden, in the woods near Peshtigo, Wisconsin. Nichols admitted to killing Vang, insisting the killing was self-defense.[2] On March 19, 2007, Nichols pleaded not guilty to the charges of first degree intentional homicide, felony possession of a weapon, and hiding a corpse.

James Allen Nichols
Born(1978-05-27)May 27, 1978
OccupationLogger
Criminal statusIncarcerated
Conviction(s)Second-degree intentional homicide
Hiding a corpse
Felon in possession of a firearm
Criminal penalty60 years

On October 6, 2007, an all-white jury found Nichols guilty of a lesser charge of second degree intentional homicide and sentenced him to 60 years in prison. "The message sent to the Hmong community is that someone can shoot a Hmong hunter and not get the maximum sentence," said Tou Ger Xiong, spokesman for the Coalition for Community Relations in St. Paul, Minnesota.[2][3][4]

Evidence and motivation

Mark Witeck, who performed the autopsy on Cha Vang, testified that Vang was shot from about 50 feet away by a shotgun, and stabbed six times in his face and neck.[5]

Attention to possible racial motives has been brought due to some of Nichol's own statements. Nichols has been quoted on record saying Hmong people are bad, mean and "kill everything and that they go for anything that moves."[4] Nichols' employer has testified that two months before the killing, Nichols mentioned that he would have killed a Hmong hunter that he had seen in the woods if he had been carrying a shotgun rather than an air-rifle.

Effects of the killing

Reports of racial tension in the forests of Wisconsin during hunting seasons had been reported since Chai Soua Vang (no relation), a Hmong hunter, was convicted of killing six Caucasian hunters two years before Cha Vang's murder.[1] Besides the immediate effects felt by family and friends at the death of Cha Vang, the killing stressed the already-tense relations between the Hmong community and predominantly Caucasian hunters in northern Wisconsin.[4]

gollark: My chance of death is still pretty low, but if I cared much I would probably try and set up a convoluted scheme of some kind where people can get access to some amount of my stuff given m of n cryptographic keys in different places.
gollark: We already *have* magic ultra-secure communications available using regular cryptography, it's basically always either poor implementation/use of those or flaws elsewhere which cause security issues.
gollark: So yes, definitely overhype-y and inaccurate.
gollark: You can't send information faster than light with quantum entanglement (or quite possibly at all), and systems which can use magic ultra-secure communications channels will not magically be immune to hacking.
gollark: Apparently lockpicks are pretty cheap and most locks are terrible and quite vulnerable to them. Which is worrying.

References

  1. "'Accidental Meeting' Led to Slaying of Hmong Hunter, Sheriff Says". The Index-Journal. January 9, 2007. p. 6. Retrieved December 9, 2014 via Newspapers.com.
  2. "Hunter found guilty in death of Hmong man". CNN. Associated Press. October 6, 2007. Archived from the original on August 13, 2007. Retrieved October 6, 2007.
  3. "Hunter Sentences for Killing Hmong Man". The Index-Journal. November 29, 2007. p. 5. Retrieved December 9, 2014 via Newspapers.com.
  4. "James Nichols Sentenced to 69 Years". 620 AM WTMJ. Associated Press. 2007. Archived from the original on 2008-05-06. Retrieved 2008-05-09.
  5. file, Jim Matthews / AP (28 November 2007). "Hunter gets 69 years for killing immigrant". msnbc.com. Retrieved 2020-01-04.
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