SALT LAKE CITY—A federal judge has cut nine months off the prison sentence of a white-separatist group member convicted in a conspiracy to scare minorities off the streets of Salt Lake City.
U.S. District Judge Dee Benson on Tuesday ordered Eric G. Egbert’s 42-month sentence reduced to 33 months.
The reduction was not opposed by prosecutors and was meant to correct a disparity between Egbert’s sentence and those of his co-defendants, Shaun A. Walker and Travis D. Massey.
All three were convicted in April 2007 of conspiracy to interfere with civil rights and interference with a federally protected activity in connection with attacks on two minority men in 2002 and 2003.
A three-judge panel of the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver ruled in April that Walker and Massey were to be re-sentenced because of insufficient evidence supporting a factor weighed in their sentencing.
Walker, of Hillsboro, W.Va., is a former chairman of the white-separatist group National Alliance who once lived in Utah. In July, Benson dropped his sentence from 87 months to 37 months.
Massey is a former alliance spokesman in Utah. Benson reduced his sentence from 57 months to 30 months.
After that, Egbert filed a motion to reduce his sentence.
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Information from: The Salt Lake Tribune,



