Far-right Proud Boys members sentenced over Manhattan brawl
Two members of US far-right group the Proud Boys pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct on Friday in connection with a brawl in Manhattan in October 2018.
Jake Freijo and Eryk Kacznyski were sentenced to five days of community service as part of a plea deal.
Six other Proud Boys members charged over the fight have also pleaded guilty and are awaiting sentencing.
The Proud Boys has been designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors US extremism.
The brawl broke out after a speech by Gavin McInnes, the Proud Boys founder, at Manhattan's Metropolitan Republican Club.
CCTV footage showed the Proud Boys members charging at a group who had come to protest against Mr McInnes' appearance and viciously beating them.
Prosecutors recommended the harshest possible sentence - a year in jail - against two of the members. John Kinsman and Maxwell Hare pleaded guilty to attempted assault and second-degree rioting charges.
Prosecutors called Kinsman, seen in the video wearing a red cap, the "single most vicious" member of Proud Boys, the New York Post reported.
Police said initially that the violence started after a protester threw a bottle - which can be seen clearly in the CCTV footage - but a second angle appeared to show that the Proud Boys members were already charging at the protesters when the bottle was thrown.
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The morning of the speech, the Metropolitan Republican Club was targeted by vandals who spray-painted anti-fascist graffiti on its walls and glued its locks shut, police said.
On the night of the brawl, police arrested three protesters in a separate incident and charged them with assault.