Teen accused of killing his gay classmate had white supremacist materials
Investigators found doodlings of swastikas and white supremacist literature in the bedroom of Brandon McInerney, 14, of Oxnard. He is being tried as an adult for murder and hate crime charges.
Investigators seized white supremacist materials, including doodlings of Nazi swastikas, from the bedroom of Brandon McInerney, the 14-year-old Oxnard student accused of gunning down his gay classmate.
The items were found after McInerney's arrest Feb. 12 for allegedly killing Lawrence "Larry" King, 15, a classmate at E.O. Green Junior High School, Senior Deputy Dist. Atty. Maeve Fox wrote in a court filing this week.
The "trove" of white supremacist literature and drawings depict a "racist skinhead philosophy of the variety espoused by Tom Metzger, David Lane and others," Fox wrote.
McInerney is being tried as an adult on a murder count, plus a hate crime allegation. Prosecutors previously declined to specify their justification for the hate crime enhancement.
But in the court documents, Fox said the materials found in the teenager's bedroom were a primary consideration in adding the hate crime charge. McInerney's attorney, Deputy Public Defender William Quest, called the prosecution's disclosure a "stunt" intended to inflame public sentiment against his client.
He said McInerney had the items because he was writing a school paper on Adolf Hitler. He also shared an interest in the German military with other family members, Quest said.
"There is no evidence Brandon was ever in a gang, no evidence he had any gang tattoos," Quest said. "His best friends at school were black and Hispanic. . . . This is a stretch by the prosecution."
A preliminary hearing in the case has been delayed by a possible change in McInerney's defense team.
catherine.saillant@latimes.com

