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Admitted Ties to White Supremacy on Jeffrey Conroy’s Jail Intake Form

Posted May 6, 2011 by Ted Hesson
Categories: Hate Watch

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During a recent performance of the play “What Killed Marcelo Lucero?” in Patchogue, the father of Lucero’s killer spoke during an audience discussion, insisting that his son had been unfairly labeled a racist.

In April 2010, Jeffrey Conroy was convicted of first-degree manslaughter as a hate crime in relation to the Lucero killing, and he received the maximum sentence of 25 years in prison.

A little more than a year later, Jeffrey Conroy’s father, Bob Conroy, sought to rebrand his son’s public image. At the play, he insisted that Jeffrey wasn’t a racist and described his son as a victim of intense media coverage.

“I’m sorry for what’s happened, but I feel that the problems of a nation fell on a 17-year-old child,” Conroy told the audience.

He later added: “This kid got more press internationally than Jeffrey Dahmer did…He was 17 years old, he could have been anyone’s child.”

After Conroy spoke, another audience member promptly responded that Conroy was trying to rewrite history:

“I’m sorry, Mr. Conroy—Marcelo Lucero is the victim, not Jeff Conroy,” the audience member said. “[The attackers] were tried in a court of law, and they got a fair trial and a fair sentence.”

In the story that I wrote about the play, I mentioned that upon admission to jail after the killing, Jeffrey Conroy told jail personnel that his parents held racist views and that he visited white supremacist websites. The interview was summarized on an “Inmate Security Risk Assessment” form.

I learned about the jail intake form during the pretrial hearing for Conroy, in which the prosecution and defense sparred over whether the document should be considered admissible in the murder trial. Conroy’s defense lawyer argued that the defendant only admitted to white supremacist activities because he feared being housed with inmates who might attack him based on his then-alleged crimes.

The form was found to be admissible, but the prosecution never introduced it as evidence.

For anyone evaluating the relevance of this document, it is important to remember that it is a risk assessment form compiled by the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office, and not an independent body.

Scroll down for a copy of the jail intake form, which I obtained through a Freedom of Information Law request. Here is the relevant information from the intake interview:

Narrative Summary
GIU#08-0290 Inmate Conroy, Jeffrey #597091 White Supremacist

Narrative
Inmate Conroy, Jeffrey #597901 is a self-admitted White Supremacist. During an interview on 11/10/08 inmate Conroy stated that he doesn’t consider himself a White Supremacist but he did say that he does have racist thoughts and beliefs. He stated that he was raised in a home where his parents held racist beliefs. Conroy further added that he has never been a member of any White Supremacist organization but he does follow White Supremacist activities on the internet. Inmate Conroy has a tattoo of a swastika on his leg.





Tags : bob conroy, hate crimes, jail intake form, jeffrey conroy, marcelo lucero, risk assessment, suffolk county sheriff's office, white supremacist, white supremacy

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