THE
YEAR IN HATE 2007
Active U.S.
Hate Groups Rise to 888 in 2007
By David Holthouse and Mark Potok
Sheriff's deputies gunned down
by "Aryan" gangsters in Bastrop, La. Tax protesters with bombs
arrested in New Hampshire. Gun-toting white supremacists
marching in Jena, La. A police
officer murdered in Salt Lake City. Nativist leaders demanding
sniper teams and mines along the Mexican border. Calls for assassinating politicians, immigrants and Jews. Rapidly spreading
racist conspiracy theories.
The end of 2007 brought to a
close another year marked by staggering levels of racist hate in America.
Even as several major hate groups struggled to survive, other new groups appeared, and the radical right as a whole appeared
to grow.
The latest annual count by the
Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) found that the number of hate groups operating in America rose to 888 last year, up 5% from 844 groups in 2006. That capped an increase
of 48% since 2000 — a hike from 602 groups attributable to the exploitation by hate groups of the continuing debate
about immigration. And it comes on top of some 300 other anti-immigration groups, about half listed by SPLC as "nativist extremist,"
formed in the last three years.
At the same time, FBI statistics
suggested that there was a 35% rise in hate crimes against Latinos between 2003 and 2006. Experts believe that such crimes
are typically carried out by people who think they are attacking immigrants.
Although there were some signs
that nativist hatred may be starting to abate, you wouldn't know that by listening to the furious rants of many groups. "America is being destroyed from within by a modern version
of Genghis Khan's army," the Emigration Party of Nevada, listed by the SPLC as a hate group, said. The group's leader, Don
Pauly, wants to send government "sniper teams" to the border and forcibly sterilize Mexican women after a first child.
"If the Jew government waits,
and hell breaks out here in the USA, our citizens will not be asking to
see any documentation," added Michael Blevins, the Florida
state leader of the neo-Nazi American National Socialist Workers Party. "They will go after anyone they think an illegal alien
based on race first."
The growth of these groups is
being helped by conspiracy theories and other racist propaganda about immigrants that is being spread by mainstream politicians
and pundits. While theories about a secret plan to merge Mexico, Canada and United States
into a single country began in radical groups, for instance, many key figures have endorsed them. Indeed, 18 states' houses
of representatives have now passed resolutions opposing the "North American Union" — an entity that does not exist and
has never been planned, but nonetheless inhabits nativists' nightmares.
Promoting such theories, coupled
with a history of ties to white supremacist groups and ideology, is what caused the Southern Poverty Law Center to add a major
anti-immigration group, the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), to its list of hate groups last year. FAIR
has also promulgated the theory that Mexico
is involved in a secret plot to "reconquer" the American Southwest.
"You need to understand that
WE ARE AT WAR RIGHT HERE IN AMERICA,"
is the way another nativist group, the Nebraska-based United Citizens of America, put it. "We are being invaded by a foreign
country and we are being betrayed from within. Our government, from top to bottom, is being controlled by global elites. They
have infiltrated our government at ALL levels."
Here's a more detailed look at
several sectors of the radical right:
NEO-NAZIS
While
the number of neo-Nazi group chapters increased over the course of 2007 from 191 to 207, this rise was largely due to a shake-up
within the National Socialist Movement (NSM). Although the NSM remains the largest
neo-Nazi organization in the country, with 73 chapters in 34 states (down from 81 chapters in 36 states in late 2006), it
suffered a mass exodus of high-profile members last year, most of whom quickly either founded new chapters of rival neo-Nazi
groups or established their own new spin-offs.
The NSM's troubles in 2007 began
last February, when it was accidentally revealed during a public court hearing that Florida
state leader David Gletty was a paid FBI informant. Discontent over the group's finances, tactics and internal security began
to swell among rank-and-file members as well as officers. Last October, several NSM heavy-hitters abruptly quit. These included
Ohio division commander Mark Martin, Storm Troop leader Tim
Bishop, Washington state leader Justin Boyer,
NSM presidential candidate John Taylor Bowles and computer expert and business manager Jim Ramm, all highly visible and active
NSM members.
Bowles, along with another disgruntled
NSM officer, Nick Chappell, formed a new group, the National Socialist Order of America,
based out of The Redneck Shop, a hate memorabilia store in Laurens, S.C., that is owned by Chappell and had been the
site of many NSM gatherings.
Ramm launched a website, "NSM
Watch," where he posted a list of 111 ex-NSM members who, according to Ramm, had either resigned or been kicked out. NSM "commander"
Jeff Schoep countered that he was merely pruning "troublemakers and drama queens." Then, last November, Schoep issued an open
letter to NSM members in which he branded Ramm and other defectors "oath breakers and race traitors" and accused them of "working
for the enemy."
The following month, Schoep announced
that he was leaving his common-law wife and six children in Minneapolis to move in with a new
girlfriend in Detroit, where he was relocating NSM's national
headquarters. Rumors abound in the neo-Nazi movement that Schoep's new flame is non-white, and that he's using NSM money to
support her in a supposedly extravagant lifestyle.
"In 2006 NSM did over $110,000
in sales, and … current projections for [2007] are around $180,000," Ramm claimed on his website late last year. "NSM
Records [the group's hate rock music company] is a business that doesn't report total profits to the members, who are expected
to just smile and hope the Commander is spending the money wisely."
The greatest beneficiary of the
NSM's internal strife was the American National Socialist Workers Party (ANSWP),
a neo-Nazi group led by another former NSM stalwart, neo-Nazi gadfly Bill White. White boasted that he's accepting "the best
of the best" NSM castaways and, indeed, ANSWP chapters more than doubled from 13 to 30 last year.
Two former powerhouses of the
neo-Nazi scene, Aryan Nations and the National
Alliance, were in states of more or less suspended animation last year. Aryan Nations still exists but is barely active.
In early 2007, two of the group's leaders, Clark Patterson and Jonathan Williams, quit to form a new Christian Identity group
called the United Church of YHVH after complaining that Aryan Nations had forgotten
its roots in Identity, a theology that says people of color are soulless non-humans and Jews are biologically descended from
Satan.
The National Alliance, a West
Virginia-based group that has declined precipitously since the death of its founder in 2002, showed signs of life last May
when it held a Holocaust denial conference that drew 75 attendees, nearly three times as many people as have attended Alliance
"leadership conferences" in recent years. But in August, the Alliance suffered a major setback
when Chairman Shaun Walker and two other Alliance members were convicted of federal civil rights
violations in a string of three racially motivated assaults in Salt Lake City
in 2002 and 2003. Walker was sentenced to 87 months in federal
prison, while his underlings received shorter sentences. Former Chairman Eric Gliebe, who had stepped down amid much criticism
earlier, re-assumed leadership of the troubled group amid swirling rumors of drug use and a pending divorce and custody battle
with his estranged wife, former stripper Erica Gliebe — a woman who now calls herself "Hollycast," an apparent sarcastic
reference to the Holocaust.
Finally, the National Vanguard looks to be all but finished. Its leader, Kevin Alfred Strom, pleaded guilty to possessing
child pornography and is facing up to 10 years in prison when he is sentenced in April.
RACIST SKINHEADS
Racist
skinhead gangs, or "crews," are unstable and often transient by nature, making them difficult to track. However, over the
course of 2007, it was possible to identify 90 racist skinhead outfits operating in the United States, up from 78 in 2006. Five of the new chapters are reactivated or
recently established divisions of Hammerskin Nation (HSN), a once-mighty coalition
of skinhead crews whose power waned earlier in this decade but is now clearly resurging. In addition to the five new domestic
chapters, HSN also now claims active crews in at least 10 foreign countries, including Australia,
Hungary and Switzerland.
Last September, the leaders of
HSN and the Vinlander Social Club, a rival skinhead coalition in the Midwest, unexpectedly announced they had reached a peace agreement, ending a blood feud of nearly 10
years. The following month, Hammerskin Nation celebrated its 20th anniversary at Hammerfest 2007, a hate rock festival held
near Portland, Ore., and hosted by the Northwest Hammerskins, a regional affiliate of HSN. The Portland-based, neo-Nazi
skinhead gang Volksfront provided security. Members of the neo-Nazi group White Revolution and the white nationalist organization Women
for Aryan Unity were in attendance. One of the speakers was Michael Lawrence, a prominent member of the Confederate Hammerskins, another HSN affiliate, and the founder of the Christian
Guard, a major Christian Identity organization.
KU KLUX KLAN
Although
most Ku Klux Klan factions continued to exploit the roiling national immigration debate in 2007 by holding anti-"illegal alien"
rallies (rather than their more typical "anti-black crime" fare), last year was a relatively quiet one for the KKK. The number
of Klan chapters dropped to 155 last year from 165 in 2006, marking the second straight year of decline after five years of
rapid growth.
One important development in
this sector came in August, when the National Aryan Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, LLC,
merged with the United Northern and Southern Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. National
Aryan Knights chapters in Louisiana resisted the merger
by forming a new splinter group under the banner of the National Aryan Knights.
The Imperial Klans of America (IKA), meanwhile, declined from 23 chapters in 2006 to just 16 last year as a case
filed last year by the Southern Poverty Law Center against IKA chief Ron Edwards, five followers and the group itself neared
trial. The lawsuit seeks damages for a boy who was attacked and severely beaten during an IKA recruiting drive at a Kentucky county fair.
BLACK SEPARATISTS
The
death last May of black separatist cult leader Yahweh ben Yahweh (born Hulon Mitchell) coincided with the ongoing rebirth
of his Nation of Yahweh, a notorious religious sect that has preached violence against
"white devils." Nearly 500 Nation of Yahweh members, many of them conspicuously flaunting material wealth in the form of expensive
cars and jewelry, attended the funeral of Yahweh ben Yahweh, who shortly before his death was released from parole after serving
11 years of an 18-year sentence on federal conspiracy charges related to 14 murders committed in South Florida in the 1980s.
Formerly moribund Yahweh websites
flared with activity following the funeral. In Rochester, N.Y.,
a white man who started a nonprofit food pantry for the homeless said that a Yahweh member who joined the nonprofit's board
in 2004 orchestrated a campaign to push him out of the organization shortly after she returned from the funeral. The man says
that he now fears for his life and that the Nation of Yahweh has taken over the building housing the organization.
The New Black Panther Party, a racist group unrelated to the original Black Panthers, was also highly active in
2007. Although Chairman Malik Zulu Shabazz was barred from entering Canada last May because of his radical ideology, Shabazz
did successfully organize a major rally for a black hate crime victim in West Virginia, made a public show of force in Jena,
La., and held an Atlanta "Black Power Summit" last October that was attended by about 100 party members from across the country.
GENERAL HATE
Other
events of importance on the radical right included the emergence of Watchmen on the Walls,
an international and incredibly virulent anti-gay organization with strong ties to Latvia. The organization has gained a foothold in the United
States among Russian-speaking Slavic immigrants on the West Coast, holding a major conference in Lynnwood, Wash., in October.
Also last year, the hate group
list's only campus outfit, the Michigan State University chapter of Young Americans for
Freedom, which was added in 2006 after the group sponsored a "Catch an Illegal Immigrant Day" contest and put out a
manifesto calling for white, male control of the MSU student government, continued to promote hate by hosting a series of
lectures by extremists such as Nick Griffin. Griffin is a
Holocaust denier and the head of the whites-only British National Party, that drew skinheads and other white supremacists
to the MSU campus.
Angela Freeman,
Anthony Griggs, Janet Smith and Laurie Wood contributed to this report.
Intelligence
Report
Spring 2008