Vol.10,No.10 Jun. 6—Jun. 19,1989 FREE! Douglas Lawrence Sheets, a former member of a white supremacist group, was found not guilty of three murder charges in connection with a gay related shooting and firebombing. He was also acquitted of an arson charge and assault with intent to kill. The jury in Sheets’ trial deliberated for over five hours on May 26 before returning to Cleveland County Superior Court and announcing their verdict in die incident at a Shelby, N.C. adult bookstore more than two years ago which left three men dead and two injured. Sheets was originally charged with 16 counts. In the trial he faced five charges: three counts of first-degree murder, one count of arson and one count of assault with a deadly weapon. As jurors returned to the courtroom, according to an Associated Press report (News & Observer, 5/27/89), several were crying. The families of the victims ran from the courtroom crying. “This is a hard case to lose, but I thought the jury could have gone either way,” said Mab Segrest, former exexutive director of North Caroliniar' Against Racist and Religious Violent prosecution had two White Patnv from prison and not a lot of physical evidence to back up all their testimony. “It’s not as though this jury let him off in the face of incontrovertable evidence,” she said. “I think if there had been a stronger case, the role homophobia played in the jury’s decision would be clearer.” The lack of a witness who could place Sheets in the area on that night hurt the state’s case, the prosecutor said. Those who testified said they had learned of Sheets’ role from Sheets himself. Four had been in jail with him. “I would have preferred having Sunday school teachers as witnesses,” District Attorney Bill Young said. Sheets, who admitted his former involvement with the Ku Klux Klan and the White Patriot Party, went on trial for the slayings before an all-whjtajury on, May 5. v Robert Jackson was scheduled for sn the same charges, but Young