A 26-year-old West Texas man was sentenced Wednesday to more than 37 years in prison for a series of arsons in 2010 in Crane, including the burning of a historic African-American church to try to kill a disabled African-American man, the U.S. attorney’s office announced. Steven Scott Cantrell of Crane was sentenced to 450 months in prison by U.S. District Judge Robert A. Junell in Midland after pleading guilty to damaging religious property and interfering with housing rights in violation of federal hate crime laws, according to a news release. Cantrell was also ordered to pay $550,780 in restitution to the victims. Cantrell admitted that on Dec. 28, 2010, he set fire to Faith in Christ Church, a predominantly African-American church, in an effort to kill a disabled African-American man who Cantrell believed lived at the church shelter. The man was not hurt. Cantrell ransacked the church, wrote threatening and racist messages in large letters across the wall next to the pastor’s office and "tagged" the church with references to the Aryan Brotherhood, the news release stated. The church arson was one of a series of racially motivated fires that Cantrell set that day to status with the Aryan Brotherhood, the release said. Cantrell admitted that he set fire to a house because he believed the resident to be Jewish. He set fire to a gym because he believed the owners served "Mexican-Americans and African-American patrons and because the gym was owned by a Caucasian man married to a woman of Mexican descent," the news release stated. Cantrell felt "disrespected" that a Caucasian man would marry a woman of Mexican descent because he believed "the white race needed to be kept pure," according to the release. Crane is about 30 miles south of Odessa. — Marty Sabota

