Holden Matthews, a white man suspected of burning three black churches, will also remain in jail after being denied bond Monday

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

The white man suspected in the burnings of three African American churches in Louisiana will remain in jail after being denied bond on Monday, as state prosecutors added new charges declaring the arsons a hate crime.

Suspect arrested in connection with fires at black churches in Louisiana Read more

Twenty-one-year-old Holden Matthews, the son of a sheriff’s deputy, entered his not guilty plea via video conference from the St Landry Parish jail. The judge set a September trial date.

In denying bail, state district judge James Doherty sided with law enforcement officials who said they worried Matthews would try to flee the area or set more fires.

“We felt that he was an immediate risk to public safety,” said Louisiana fire marshal Butch Browning. “In my mind, I felt another fire was imminent.”

Testifying, Browning outlined a litany of evidence, including new details of the investigation that he said tied Matthews to the torching of the three black churches over 10 days.

Browning described cellphone records placing Matthews at the fire locations, and said images on the phone showed all three churches burning before law enforcement arrived and showed Matthews “claiming responsibility” for the fires.

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Matthews, who had no previous criminal record, was arrested on Wednesday on three charges of arson of a religious building. Prosecutors filed documents on Monday adding three more charges, accusing Matthews of violating Louisiana’s hate crime law, confirming that they believe the fires were racially motivated, a link authorities had previously stopped short of making.

Browning said federal officials also are considering filing additional federal hate crime and arson charges against Matthews.

Shackled and wearing an orange prison jumpsuit, Matthews did not speak to the court during the hearing, letting his court-appointed lawyer enter the not guilty plea for him. His parents watched their son’s appearance on video conference from the courtroom, his father repeatedly wringing his hands and, at one point, leaving the room in tears.

The fires, all started with gasoline, occurred in and around Opelousas, about 60 miles west of Louisiana’s capital, Baton Rouge.

Matthews’ arrest came a little more than two weeks after the first blaze at the St Mary Baptist church on 26 March in Port Barre, a town just outside Opelousas. Days later, the Greater Union Baptist church and Mount Pleasant Baptist church in Opelousas were burned. Each was more than 100 years old.

The churches were empty at the time and no one was injured. But at one location, two occupants of a nearby home had to evacuate when the siding on the home started to catch fire.

The fires set the community on edge. Governor John Bel Edwards said the church burnings were a reminder “of a very dark past of intimidation and fear”.

Matthews’ attorney, Quincy Cawthorne, questioned some of the evidence cited by Browning and said Matthews didn’t have the financial means to be a flight risk. He also objected to suggestions that the house near one of the churches was intentionally set on fire, putting the residents’ lives in danger.

A pretrial hearing in the case was set for 17 July, with jury selection scheduled to begin on 10 September.

Prosecutors gave more insight into the evidence that law enforcement used to build their case against Matthews.

The fire marshal said a receipt shows Matthews bought a gas can and a package of oil rags similar to those found at the site of the fires. A lighter and the package of oil rags, missing some of its contents, were found in Matthews’ truck, Browning said.

He said Matthews documented the fire on his cellphone, while video surveillance in the area around the churches showed a truck similar to the one Matthews drives. Matthews had copies of news reports about the fires on his phone as well, Browning said.

“He actually superimposed himself on those news reports, claiming responsibility for these fires,” Browning said.

In addition, Browning said video on Matthews’ phone showed a conversation with a friend before the fires in which he talked about burning churches and using gasoline to do it. He said Matthews posted on Facebook about and showed interest in a movie called Lords of Chaos, which Browning said is a recent Norwegian film that involved church burnings.

Matthews had shown interest in “black metal”, an extreme subgenre of heavy metal, Browning said. The music has been linked, in some instances, to fires at Christian churches in Norway in the 1990s.

“The evidence we have was unequivocal,” Browning said. Later, he added: “He has clearly demonstrated the characteristics of a pathological fire setter.”