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Mistrial declared in Aryan Brotherhood case

Booking mug of alleged Aryan Brotherhood leader Barry Mills
Friday's mistrial means Barry "The Baron" Mills, shown here, and Tyler "The Hulk" Bingham will be sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole.Ho / Reuters file
/ Source: The Associated Press

Jurors were unable to decide Friday whether to impose the death penalty on two convicted leaders of the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang, prompting a mistrial in the matter and giving the men life in prison.

The same jury convicted Barry "The Baron" Mills and Tyler "The Hulk" Bingham in July. Jurors were then asked to determine whether the two should be sentenced to death or life in prison without possibility of parole.

After 3 1/2 days of deliberations, they told the judge Thursday they were deadlocked, but he ordered them to return to the jury room and try to resolve their differences. A day later, the panelists said they would not be able to reach a unanimous decision.

"We are honestly and conscientiously unable to agree after a full consideration of the evidence," they said in a note sent to Judge David O. Carter.

The judge declared a mistrial in the sentencing phase of the trial, meaning Mills, 58, and Bingham, 59, will serve life in prison without parole for murder, racketeering and conspiracy.

The case against the pair was part of a larger indictment that federal prosecutors hope will dismantle the violent white supremacist organization accused of running powerful gambling operations and drug rings from inside some of the nation's most notorious prisons.

Experts say the full indictment, which lists 32 murders and attempted murders, makes up one of the largest federal capital punishment cases in U.S. history, with more than a dozen people potentially facing execution. More defendants go on trial in Los Angeles later this year.

Jurors told Carter they were split 9-to-3 in favor of death for Mills and 8-to-4 in favor of life in prison for Bingham.

The jurors were not made available for comment. Carter said they would be escorted from the courtroom to their cars by authorities, and their identities would remain secret.

The judge scheduled a formal sentencing hearing for Nov. 13.