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Alleged white supremacist faces capital charge for Kansas murders

State prosecutors say Frazier Glenn Cross killed three at Jewish community sites; feds pursuing hate crime case

Kansas prosecutors filed state-level murder charges Tuesday against the white supremacist accused in shootings that left three people dead at two Jewish community sites in suburban Kansas City.

Frazier Glenn Cross has been charged with one count of capital murder for the deaths of a 14-year-old boy and his grandfather outside the Jewish Community Center of Greater Kansas City, Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe said at a news conference. Cross also faces one count of first-degree, premeditated murder for the death of a woman who was gunned down while visiting her mother at a nearby retirement complex. He could be sentenced to death, but prosecutors have not yet said whether they will pursue the death penalty.

The capital murder charge carries the death penalty as possible punishment, Howe said. Cross is being held on $10 million bond and is scheduled to appear in court at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Johnson County District Court.

Cross, a 73-year-old Vietnam War veteran from southwestern Missouri, founded the Carolina Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in his native North Carolina and later the White Patriot Party. His activities have long drawn the attention of hate-group monitors, and federal prosecutors say there's enough evidence to warrant putting the case before a grand jury as a hate crime. Moving the case from state to federal prosecutors would likely mean tougher punishments if Cross is convicted.

He's suspected of killing 69-year-old physician William Lewis Corporon and his 14-year-old grandson, Reat Griffin Underwood, outside the community center. Both were Methodist.

Minutes later, Terri LaManno, a 53-year-old Catholic occupational therapist and mother of two, was gunned down outside a Jewish retirement complex, where she was visiting her mother.

Cross shouted "Heil, Hitler" at television cameras as he was arrested. Sunday's killings shocked the city on the eve of Passover and refocused attention on the nation's problem with ethnic- and religious-related violence.

The Associated Press

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