Bloomington man sentenced for KKK graffiti on car at Iowa hotel

WATERLOO, Ia. — A Bloomington man convicted of scrawling hate graffiti on a Black teen’s car in Iowa in 2020 said he has been targeted because of the allegations.

“Through this whole ordeal, I’ve lost quite a bit,” Gary Eugene Shelton, 56, said March 21 during a hearing in Black Hawk County District Court.

“I lost my career over this. I live in a chicken shack because that’s all I could get,” he said.

Shelton, who denies he was behind the graffiti, said he continues to lose employment, has been assaulted and is living separately from his wife for her protection. A jury found him guilty of criminal mischief in violation of individual rights on Dec. 1, 2023. 

“We have lost our homes. She has been threatened at work,” he said.

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Judge Andrea Dryer was unfazed, calling the crime “flat-out repulsive” as she sentenced Shelton to five years in prison, suspended to two to five years of probation.

“I actually find it appropriate that the community would condemn such a crime,” Dryer said.

She noted that in addition to the emotional toll, the teen wasn’t in a financial situation to afford removing the letters “KKK” scrawled on her vehicle. She had to drive around with the damage on display until she eventually sold the car.







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Evidence photo of KKK painted on the doors of an African-American teen’s vehicle in June 2020.




Shelton will be able to transfer his probation to Illinois. The sentencing also extends a restraining order keeping him from contacting the victim for five years.

According to testimony in court, the teen had parked her Ford 500 at a Waterloo hotel in June 2020 to celebrate a friend’s high school graduation. The incident coincided with racial justice protests following the death of George Floyd, and her vehicle had a “Black Lives Matter” message written in the back window.

The morning the teen left the hotel, she found the letters KKK smeared on her passenger-side door with an unknown waxy substance. Soapy water couldn’t remove the letters, nor did buffing, according to testimony.

The crime was investigated by the Waterloo Police Department and the FBI.

Shelton was traveling for work and stayed at the hotel at the time of the incident. Authorities said surveillance video from the hotel showed his work truck pulling up next to the Ford. The truck’s passenger side door was opened for a few minutes, shielding what was happening behind it before the truck pulled away, police said.

Shelton denied doing anything to the Ford when interviewed by investigators and alleged that the vehicle also had anti-white and anti-law enforcement messages on it.

During trial, the defense noted the hotel cameras were motion-activated and weren’t recording around the clock.

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