[color="Red"]Kevin Haas (Artist rendition)
http://www.theeyeopener.com/storydetail.cfm?storyid=1366

Jews slice and dice relaity for us even when pleading guilty!
No $10,000 fine like our own Thomasz W? Hey Thomasz, maybe if you'd dumped over kike gravestones, you'd have gotten off lighter.
Mr. Haas will be under house arrest for six months, and must not own any weapons or use a computer linked to the Internet.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060622.wonthate0622/BNStory/National/home
http://torontosun.com/News/TorontoAndGTA/2006/06/23/1648842-sun.html
Fri, June 23, 2006
[color="Red"]Jew admits hate crime 'as bad as theirs' (Huh? What "theirs"? There is no other mention of "theirs" in this story)
A Toronto man admitted yesterday he committed hate crimes by spreading anti-Muslim posters and graffiti on the Ryerson University campus in a misguided form of revenge.
Kevin Haas, 23, confessed to police that he committed the crimes two years ago as retaliation for anti-Semitic incidents involving graffiti and the toppling of tombstones at a Jewish cemetery.
Haas was caught by campus police putting up "Death to Muslims" posters and other derogatory signs around the campus on Oct. 18, 2004.
[color="Red"]Haas, who's Jewish, expressed his "genuine" remorse and conceded his hate-mongering actions were "just as bad as theirs," court heard.
Haas was given a six-month conditional sentence, 12 months probation and was ordered to write a letter of apology to the Arab and Muslim associations at Ryerson and perform 100 hours of community service.
Not only did he knock over jew tombstones, he issued specific death threats (the Canadian definition) via flyers and graffiti. Penalty? Six months house arrest at home in front of his TV.
http://www.theeyeopener.com/storydetail.cfm?storyid=1366
Ryerson security had been on alert since late last week, when both the Arab and Muslim Student Associations found death threats slipped under their office doors.
Nahla Darkazanli, president of the ASA, discovered a threatening flyer in her office on Thursday evening and immediately called Ahmed Arshi, president of the MSA.
How it went down...
June 23 - Multifaith Centre is spray painted with the Jewish Star of David and the words "Die Muslim Die."July - Posters threatening death are found around Jorgenson Hall. In one of the posters, a group calling itself "FBC Ridaz" takes responsibility for the June 23 spray paint.
"Full Blooded Israelis Brigades," took responsibility for another poster.
More graffiti appears sporadically throughout the summer.
August - Ahmed Arshi, president of the Muslim Student Association, finds a note in the group's mailbox saying "Your president is next."
Oct. 14 - Group calling itself "Notorious Motionz" slips notes under the doors of the MSA and the Arab Student Association saying "Those who follow the Islam faith need to be killed in the worst possible way imaginable."
Oct. 18 - Morning - the ASA is informed by Ryerson Security that the sign by their office was defaced and removed.
Oct. 18 - Evening - Ryerson Security catches Kevin Haas, 21, allegedly putting up inciteful literature by the ASA office. He is arrested at 7:25 p.m. and charged with seven counts of mischief under $5,000 and two counts of threatening death
No one had been in the ASA office since the previous Tuesday.
Friday morning, Arshi found the same flyer in his office. The presidents took the flyers to security together, and police were notified that afternoon.
The flyers display a black and white photo of a white male with a caption that says: "Those who follow the Islam faith need to
be killed in the worst possible way imaginable."Of all the hate literature left on campus, the most recent is by far the worst, according to Moyer.
When Darkazanli went to the ASA office Monday morning, her group's signboard was gone and a message from security awaited her saying
that the sign had been vandalized the day before.That night, two plainclothes security officers were patrolling the third floor of the Podium Building around 7:30 p.m. They noticed a suspicious man pinning a flyer outside the ASA's office. Security apprehended the man without a struggle. He was later handed over to Toronto police.
Police are not seeking other suspects in the case.