By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent @StacyBrownMedia
     A federal grand jury on Thursday, February 10, indicted Dushko Vulchev, 45, of Houlton, Maine, on four counts of damage to religious property involving fire and one count of use of fire to commit a federal felony in connection with a fire that destroyed a predominately Black church in Springfield.
Authorities previously charged Vulchev in April 2021, four months after the December 28, 2020, fire at the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Presbyterian Church.
Court documents revealed that the fire, which caused significant damage to the building, was related to the arsons and malicious damage to vehicles that previously occurred on church property and the surrounding area.
Those incidents included a fire at the backdoor of the MLK Church on Dec. 13, 2020, and two additional fires near the backdoor of the church on Dec. 15, 2020.
According to a news release, authorities later determined that Vulchev was the culprit after reviewing video surveillance.
According to court documents, during a search of Vulchevâs vehicle, multiple electronic storage devices containing images demonstrating Vulchevâs racial animus toward Black people, including a âWhite Lives Matterâ mural and a photo of Adolf Hitler in a track suit were seized. Vulchevâs electronic devices also allegedly contained messages revealing Vulchevâs hatred of Black people dating back several years, with Vulchevâs recent messages from December 2020 calling to âeliminate all N****s.â
According to the court documents, individuals familiar with Vulchev told law enforcement that Vulchev frequently displayed racial animus towards non-whites and routinely referred to Black people using a racial epithet.
The charge of damage to religious property involving fire provides for a sentence
re imposed by a federal district court judge based upon the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.
The news release revealed that the case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Deepika Bains Shukla, Chief of Rollinsâs Springfield Branch Office, and Trial Attorney Kyle Boynton of the Civil Rights Division.

