An east Texas man with a penchant for dressing as a Confederate soldier and singing “Dixie” online now faces multiple federal charges related to illegal gun purchases.
An east Texas man with a penchant for dressing as a Confederate soldier and singing “Dixie” online now faces multiple federal charges related to illegal gun purchases.
April 21 is a day remembered for a number of momentous events— the anniversaries of the founding of Rome, the premier of “Walker, Texas Ranger” and the death of Prince — but thankfully the pathetic neo-Nazi rally in Newnan, Georgia will have no place in our collective consciousness.
It started out as a gag on alt-right and racist websites: The idea that someone should claim credit for Nikolas Cruz after he was charged with killing 17 people at a high school in Parkland, Florida.
Prosecutors are expected to ask for a life sentence without parole for a 26-year-old neo-Nazi skinhead who pleaded guilty this week in Las Vegas to killing a 75-year-old woman.
When imprisoned neo-Nazi Matt Hale sued the federal Bureau of Prisons over restrictions on his mail, he sought nearly $10 million in damages.
The neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement (NSM) may have agreed not to return to Charlottesville, Virginia, with weapons, but that’s certainly not stopping its members from planning a string of racist rallies elsewhere, including one on April 21 in Newnan, Georgia.
The Connecticut State Police (CSP) arrested Eric Gervais, 37, on March 1, 2018, for possession of illegal weapons and potential bomb-making materials.
Matthew Heimbach, the leader of the Traditionalist Worker Party, is free on bond after being charged with strangulation and battery in southern Indiana.
The white nationalist movement has been embroiled in a war over optics since last year’s Unite the Rally in Charlottesville, and Richard Spencer’s disastrous event at Michigan State University last weekend only increased tensions between those dedicated to street action and others who worry that high-profile confrontations will damage the movement’s image.
For years, David Duke has hidden many of his racist affiliations under the hood of the Ku Klux Klan.