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Extremist youth grouping gets on trial in Petersburg court

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  • Extremist youth grouping gets on trial in Petersburg court

    ITAR-TASS News Agency
    TASS
    July 5, 2005 Tuesday 12:51 PM Eastern Time

    Extremist youth grouping gets on trial in Petersburg court

    By Julia Andreyeva


    St PETERSBURG, July 5 - A trial over members of a youth grouping
    bearing an English name of the Mad Crowd has begun in the City court
    of St Petersburg.

    The Mad Crowd guys are accused of attacks on foreigners out of the
    motives of ethnic intolerance.

    The court is hearing the case of six youngsters aged from 17 to 20
    years old. Investigation has proved their involvement in five attacks
    that victimized seven people, including citizens of China, Armenia
    and Azerbaijan.

    Law enforcers are charging the six activists of the Mad Crowd with
    offenses falling under Article 217 of the Russian Criminal Code that
    stipulates punishment for acts of ethnic strife.

    One of the youngsters is also accused of planning a murder, and he is
    kept in custody while five others are free on written recognizance
    not to leave the city.

    The Mad Crowd's leader, a 20 year-old man, and his closest assistant
    have been placed on an international wanted list.

    "The grouping was set up in 2002, initially as a group of football
    fans aiming to organize riots," a law enforcement source said in an
    interview with Itar-Tass.

    "It was later joined by youngsters from an outlawed nationalistic
    youth grouping called Schultz'88, some members of which had already
    stood court trials, and the Mad Crowd got totally different
    objectives then," the source said.

    All the attacks on foreigners were carefully planned, and the
    extremists would sometimes invite spectators - the teenagers whom
    they later planned to invite to the Mad Crowd.

    Last October, the Prosecutor's Office merged several criminal cases
    into one and investigated them as crimes committed by an organized
    grouping.

    Investigators confiscated printed literature during searches, but
    they did not manage to establish the printing houses where it
    originated from or the people who might have financed the printing.
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