(U.S.) Las Vegas: Aryan Warriors’ defense begins
— court room defense of Nazi Aryan Warriors suspects
Category: Racial Supremacism
reports and articles on white and racial supremacism
Arizona: 2 White supremacists arrested in 2004 letter bombing
(U.S.) Arizona: 2 White supremacists arrested in ’04 letter bombing
— The Arizona Republic reports that “Dennis Mahon, a longtime leader in the national White supremacy movement, and his brother have been arrested by federal agents in connection with the 2004 letter bombing of Don Logan, who is Black and at the time headed Scottsdale’s diversity office.”
— “A federal grand jury indicted Mahon and his twin, Daniel Mahon, June 16 on charges of conspiracy to damage buildings and property by means of explosive. Dennis Mahon was also charged with malicious damage of a building by means of explosives and distribution of information related to explosives.”
— also report: “Supremacist twins out to do harm, police say”
—- “Federal authorities said Friday that White supremacists Dennis Mahon, 58, and his twin brother, Daniel, were determined to commit violent acts on behalf of the White Aryan Resistance, as they did in the 2004 bombing of Scottsdale’s diversity office.”
—- “Under the slogan ‘Tolerance is suicide. Diversity is death,’ Dennis Mahon, a longtime leader in the national White-supremacy movement, and his brother conspired to, among other acts, deliver the bomb to the Scottsdale Office of Diversity and Dialogue.”
Kansas City: Former area Ku Klux Klan (KKK) leader, brother indicted in 2004 mail bombing
(U.S.) Kansas City: Former area KKK leader, brother indicted in 2004 mail bombing
— The Kansas City Star reports on “former Kansas City area Ku Klux Klan leader Dennis Mahon”
— “federal prosecutors in Arizona announced that Mahon, 58, and his twin brother, Daniel, had been indicted in the 2004 mail bombing of a Scottsdale city office that promoted racial and cultural diversity”
— “‘There are few criminal acts as cowardly as a parcel bomb,’ said Christopher White of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service in Phoenix.”
— “The Mahons’ arrests Thursday in Illinois coincided with unrelated charges being announced against Robert Joos, a Powell, Mo., man whom Dennis Mahon allegedly called the morning the bomb arrived in Scottsdale.”
— “Authorities charged Joos, 56, with being a felon in possession of firearms. ”
— “According to court records, Mahon allegedly sent an undercover federal informant to Joos, who taught him how to make napalm.”
— “Also Thursday, agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives searched the Warsaw, Ind., home of Tom Metzger, director of the White Aryan Resistance and an associate of the Mahons.”
— see also: Arizona: 2 White supremacists arrested in 2004 letter bombing
Maryland – Waldorf: Racial Hate Crime Reported in Local Neigborhood – “KKK”
(U.S.) Maryland – Waldorf: Racial Hate Crime Reported in Local Neigborhood
— automobile damaged and vandalized with “KKK”
Hate crimes target black churches in the Obama era
Indiana: White Supremacist’s home in Warsaw raided
(U.S.) Indiana: White Supremacist’s home in Warsaw raided
— “Agents served a search warrant on the Warsaw home of Thomas Metzger, according to Special Agent Kim Riddell with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.”
— “A longtime leader in the white supremacist movement and founder of the White Aryan Resistance group, Metzger manages a racist Web site and has been affiliated with a number of hate groups such as the Ku Klux Klan and the Christian Identity movement, according to the Anti-Defamation League”
Louisiana: Accessory in Ku Klux Klan killing admits guilt, gets one-year sentence
(U.S.) Louisiana: Accessory in Ku Klux Klan killing admits guilt, gets one-year sentence
— Danielle Jones – in murder of Ku Klux Klan recruit Cynthia Lynch
— “A member of a Bogalusa Ku Klux Klan group was sentenced Thursday to a year in prison after she pleaded guilty to being an accessory in the killing of an Oklahoma woman who reportedly tried to back out of a KKK initiation last year in St. Tammany Parish.”
— “Almost timid, Danielle Jones, 24, quietly admitted giving authorities false information immediately after the murder of Klan recruit Cynthia Lynch, 43, who was shot to death Nov. 9 in a remote part of northeastern St. Tammany. Jones later acknowledged witnessing the shooting, according to the factual basis she admitted to during her plea at the parish courthouse in Covington.”
— “In November, seven alleged Sons of Dixie members, all from the Bogalusa area, were booked on obstruction of justice charges, but the grand jury only indicted Shane Foster, 21, and Frank Stafford, 21, on those charges. The panel indicted Jones on the lesser accessory after the fact charge, and dropped all charges against the four others who had been arrested on obstruction charges.”
New York: “Racialist” Lawrence Auster writes article linking Michael Jackson’s death with “affirmative action”
New York: self-proclaimed “Racialist” Lawrence Auster writes article linking Michael Jackson’s death with “affirmative action”
— more “racialist” hatred from Lawrence Auster: “The problem of racial differences, again”
Mississippi: The Tangled Web of Hate – Neo-Confederates and White Supremacism
Mississippi: The Tangled Web of Hate – Neo-Confederates and White Supremacism
— Jackson Free Press reports: “The Southern Poverty Law Center counts the Council of Conservative Citizens as a ‘Neo-Confederate’ hate group, which, like the more radical League of the South, fights for the rights of ‘the Confederacy.’ The CofCC stops short of calling for a second secession from the Union.”
— “Neo-Confederates unite behind goals of preserving Confederate monuments and honoring the Confederate battle flag, in addition to fostering ‘pro-white,’ anti-immigrant politics.”
— “Jared Taylor, keynote speaker for this year’s CofCC conference, is editor of American Renaissance magazine, which describes itself as ‘America’s premiere publication of racial-realist thought.'”
— “‘Race is an important aspect of individual and group identity. Of all the fault lines that divide society — language, religion, class, ideology — it is the most prominent and divisive,’ Taylor wrote. ‘Race and racial conflict are at the heart of the most serious challenges the Western World faces….Attempts to gloss over the significance of race or even to deny its reality only make problems worse.'”
— “Taylor has declared integration a failure, and points to African American and Hispanic crime rates as proof. He questions the ability of blacks to live successfully in a civilized society, and has said that Central Americans are organizing to invade the rest of North America. All the while, Taylor claims not to be a white supremacist, countering that he is a ‘yellow’ supremacist, because he believes Asians to be the most advanced people followed by whites, with those of African descent bringing up the evolutionary rear.”
— “Neo-Confederate group members often ‘cross pollinate’ other white supremacist groups, using similar rhetoric and relying on the same sources for their ‘ethnic solidarity’ (i.e. pro-white) stances. The Confederate Society of America, for example, has ties to the CofCC and the League of the South through its president, Craig Maus, who has held leadership posts in both organizations. And the Sons of Confederate Veterans publication Alabama Confederate, which has condemned the Emancipation Proclamation as unconstitutional, has included articles by League of the South members.”
Virginia: White supremacist literature shocks Windsor residents, police
(U.S.) Virginia: White supremacist literature shocks Windsor residents, police
— Windsor resident reports “white supremacist newspaper” in driveway
— “‘It was several pages, like a three- to four-page newspaper,’ she said. ‘It was definitely professional.'”
— “Many Windsor residents received white supremacist literature in their driveways two weeks ago, said Windsor Police Chief Robert Porti.”
— “Residents complained of a truck entering neighborhoods in this town of about 3,000 people and dropping off literature onto driveways. Police responded to the calls, but were unable to find a truck making the deliveries.”