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5 white nationalists sue Seattle man for allegedly leaking their identities

 

Five people affiliated with white nationalist hate group Patriot Front are suing a Seattle-area man who they say infiltrated the group and disclosed their identities online, leading them to lose their jobs and face harassment.

 

The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court for Western Washington, The Seattle Times reported on Tuesday. The suit accuses David Capito, 37, also known as Vyacheslav Arkhangelskiy, of using a false name in 2021 when Patriot Front accepted him as a member.

 

Then, Capito allegedly took photos at the group’s Pacific Northwest gatherings, recorded members’ license plates, and used hidden microphones to record conversations, according to the lawsuit.

 

The lawsuit also alleges that around November 2021, Capito got in touch with “anarchist hackers” known for targeting far-right groups, who helped him access Patriot Front’s online chats.

 

Resulting leaks published online exposed the names, occupations, home addresses, and other identifying information about the group’s members, who had sought to hide their involvement.

 

“At a deeper level, this complaint seeks to vindicate the rule of law and basic principles of free expression for persons who espouse unpopular opinions,” the lawsuit states.

 

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So, free expression only if they can do it anonymously? The first amendment doesn't mean freedom from consequences.

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Orthodox Jewish Florida mayor receives neo-Nazi death threat

 

Shlomo Danzinger the mayor of Surfside, Florida, received an email threatening his family in their home signed by someone claiming to belong to the Fourth Reich on August 4, according to local media.

 

The email referenced various vague Nazi elements such as resurrecting the Nazi Party, but also specifically targeted Danzinger with the possibility of coming to his house to “teach his family a lesson,” reported VIN News.

 

Authorities saw the threat as credible, with the email being passed along to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and then further escalated to the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force as well as the State Attorney's office.

 

“Essentially, the email said that perhaps it would be appropriate for the writer to come by my house and teach my family a lesson,” Danzinger told VIN News.

 

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1 hour ago, China said:

The email referenced various vague Nazi elements such as resurrecting the Nazi Party, but also specifically targeted Danzinger with the possibility of coming to his house to “teach his family a lesson,” reported VIN News.

Hmm, yes, can't put my finger on it, but resurrecting the NAZI party does seem like a vaguely NAZI element.

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I recall once a comment, along the lines that history has a term for people who served the Nazis, because they were loyal to their country. Or because their father and grandfathers were soldiers. Or because it was the job they could get. Or because they wanted to protect their children. 
 

They call them "Nazis". 
 

 

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Neo-Nazis March Through Florida Park

 

A large group of neo-Nazis wearing red and waving flags with swastikas marched through Cranes Roost Park in Altamonte Springs, Florida, on Saturday shouting “we are everywhere,” according to a video shared by a state lawmaker. Carlos Guillermo Smith, a former member of the Florida House of Representatives, said in a tweet that the demonstrators were raising “Heil Hitler” salutes. State Rep. Anna V. Eskamani cited the incident as an “absolutely disgusting … example of the far right extremism growing in FL.” “Florida is our home and I refuse to hand it over to extremists. We have to stand united against antisemitism, anti-Blackness, and anti-LGBTQ bigotry in order to take our state back,” Guillermo Smith said. In anticipation for Labor Day, the Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) Center on Extremism issued a statement on Friday warning that two extremist groups—known as the Goyim Defense League and Blood Tribe— were “planning to gather in Florida in September 2023 for a joint, public demonstration(s) they are calling the ‘March of the Redshirts.’” 

 

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For 30 years, a memorial to Nazi collaborators sat largely unnoticed just outside Philadelphia. Now it’s drawing outrage.

 

Drive north out of Philadelphia into Elkins Park and you’ll arrive at the cemetery entrance in less than 10 minutes. A couple turns off Broad Street and there it is, faintly visible from the road:

 

A large stone cross honoring Nazi collaborators.

 

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The monument, in a Montgomery County community known for its synagogues, is dedicated to the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the Schutzstaffel — the Nazi military branch often referred to simply as “the SS.”

 

The slab was erected by veterans groups about 30 years ago at St. Mary’s Ukrainian Catholic Cemetery to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the creation of the unit, which drew volunteers and conscripts from Nazi-occupied Ukraine to fight for Germany during World War II.

 

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Neo-Nazis March Through Florida Park

 

A large group of neo-Nazis wearing red and waving flags with swastikas marched through Cranes Roost Park in Altamonte Springs, Florida, on Saturday shouting “we are everywhere,” according to a video shared by a state lawmaker. Carlos Guillermo Smith, a former member of the Florida House of Representatives, said in a tweet that the demonstrators were raising “Heil Hitler” salutes. State Rep. Anna V. Eskamani cited the incident as an “absolutely disgusting … example of the far right extremism growing in FL.” “Florida is our home and I refuse to hand it over to extremists. We have to stand united against antisemitism, anti-Blackness, and anti-LGBTQ bigotry in order to take our state back,” Guillermo Smith said. In anticipation for Labor Day, the Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) Center on Extremism issued a statement on Friday warning that two extremist groups—known as the Goyim Defense League and Blood Tribe— were “planning to gather in Florida in September 2023 for a joint, public demonstration(s) they are calling the ‘March of the Redshirts.’” 

 

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Neo-Nazi groups spew hate outside Disney World and near Orlando, officials say

 

Groups of neo-Nazis and white supremacists spread antisemitic, white supremacist and anti-LGBTQ messages outside Disney World and in the nearby Orlando, Florida, area Saturday in the latest examples of rising antisemitism in the U.S., officials said.

 

About 15 people wearing clothing and bearing flags emblazoned with Nazi insignia demonstrated outside the entrance to the Disney Springs shopping center, said the Orange County Sheriff's Office, which said deputies were dispatched around 10:40 a.m.

 

According to the Anti-Defamation League, a civil rights organization dedicated to countering extremism, participants carried antisemitic, white supremacist and anti-LGBTQ flags and signs. The group consisted of members of the neo-Nazi groups Order of the Black Sun, Aryan Freedom Network and 14 First, a now disbanded group that has been absorbed into the National Socialist Movement, the largest neo-Nazi group in the U.S., according to the ADL.

 

The extremists dispersed after about two hours, and no one was arrested, the sheriff's office said.

 

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Maine Community Battling Neo-Nazi ‘Blood Tribe’ Scooping Up Real Estate

 

Asmall community in northern Maine is taking on a gang of neo-Nazis who call themselves the "Blood Tribe" and are working feverishly to set up a white supremacist headquarters in the village.

 

Members, led by extremist former Marine Christopher "The Hammer" Pohlhaus, on Saturday, joined other neo-Nazi groups in greater Orlando, Florida, to salute Hitler and spew virulently racist, antisemitic and anti-LGBTQ slurs, said local police.

 

"This is just the beginning," Pohlhaus vowed in the so-called "march of the redshirts."

 

Earlier this year, the Blood Tribe helped organize an anti-drag protest in Ohio, where they shouted "Sieg Heil" and threw the Nazi salute.

 

When Blood Tribe members are not busy fomenting hate gatherings, they're buying up real estate in Springfield, population 293, horrifying the locals, according to reports.

 

“We have a problem with Nazis coming to set up a military-style camp,” Maine Democratic State Sen. Joe Baldacci told the Daily Beast in a story last week, referring to the tribe setting up shop in Maine.

 

Baldacci is proposing legislation that would prohibit any group from creating paramilitary training facilities in the state, as 25 other states have already done.

 

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Neo-Nazis Are Shocked a Guy Called 'BoneFace' Isn't Who They Thought He Was

 

What was meant to be the biggest show of force by Neo-Nazis in the U.S. this year, turned into yet another display of inflighting, this time over a heavily tattooed racist named “Boneface.” 

 

Over the weekend, the Goyim Defence League and the Blood Tribe—two neo-Nazi groups—held a rally in Orlando, Florida, which saw about 50 of their members march in unison on the streets and scream racial slurs at locals. The rally came just one week after a man in nearby Jacksonville shot and killed three Black people with a rifle that he had drawn swastikas on. Earlier in the day another group of neo-Nazis held a smaller rally outside of Disney World. In total it’s estimated over 100 Nazis rallied that day.


Footage of the Blood Tribe, who wore matching red uniforms and marched in unison spread across the internet over the weekend, with one individual really sticking out.  Walking next to Christopher “Hammer” Pohlhaus, the leader of the Blood Tribe, was a tall skinny man whose face was covered in tattoos giving him a similar look to the Marvel comic book character the Red Skull. This man was known as “Boneface,” and he was pushed to the very forefront of the weekend's neo-Nazi action. 

 

The Nazis loved “Boneface,” whose real name is Kent McLellan. They adored his look and were enamored by his tales of how he allegedly traveled to Ukraine and fought with the Azov Battalion, an infamous battalion with Ukraine’s National Guard that has deep neo-Nazi ties. Like many other far-right figures, he’s also released horrific rap songs. 

 

But Boneface’s unique look was his downfall. He was spotted by far-right influencers who were attempting to portray the rally as a false flag operation put on by the federal government to discredit the far-right wing. Several seized upon Boneface and dug up his criminal records. The man’s claims didn’t match with his criminal history and it turns out the photos he was sharing of proof he had traveled and fought in Ukraine were just poor photoshops and he offer no real evidence to back up his wild claims.

 

The downfall of Boneface was swift and brutal. 

 

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SS uniform-wearing group ordered to leave Sheringham 1940s festival

 

A group of men wearing Nazi military uniforms had to be escorted from a 1940s celebration "for their own safety", organisers said.

 

They were wearing German SS outfits and were asked to leave the event in Sheringham, Norfolk, after complaints.

 

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Marshals escorted the men out of the town and police said they were investigating a reported assault.

 

One member of the group, who did not want to be named, said they had not intended to cause offence.

 

Graham Deans, organiser of the annual Sheringham 1940s Weekend, said: "Their mannerisms and the dress was inappropriate for the event."

 

The uniforms worn by the men, aged between 30 and 50, bore swastikas and death's head symbols, as first revealed by the Eastern Daily Press.

 

"This regalia is extremely inappropriate, offensive and disrespectful," said Mr Deans.

 

Mr Deans said the weekend was about celebrating the camaraderie and team spirit of the 1940s and that, in future, the festival team would be posting rules regarding costumes on boards for people to see as they entered the town.

 

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Neo-Nazi Fight Clubs Are Growing Rapidly, New Research Shows

 

Active Clubs—neo-Nazi clubs that focus on fitness and martial arts training—are growing at a rapid pace and not just in the United States. 

 

From Denmark, to France, and Canada, semi-autonomous white supremacist groups have been popping up across the globe and recruiting young white men to come train. According to a new report by the Counter Extremism Project (CEP) that was shared with VICE News, “since the creation of the first Active Club in late 2020, at least 100 Active Clubs have been created in the U.S, Canada, and Europe.”


"This is an unprecedented growth. I've never seen a network in right-wing extremism grow so fast. Usually it takes years to build a transnational network,” Alexander Ritzmann, the report’s author and senior advisor to the CEP, told VICE News. “It’s concerning.” 

 

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Cars tagged with swastikas in multiple Los Angeles neighborhoods

 

Authorities are investigating several vandalism and hate crimes involving unknown suspects spray painting swastikas on vehicles in Los Angeles County, police said. 

 

The crimes were being investigated by the Los Angeles Police Department and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, according to the LAPD. 

 

Police were investigating incidents in the LAPD's Pacific and 77th Street areas, while it was earlier reported that swastikas were discovered spray-painted on multiple vehicles in the Ladera Heights and View Park-Windsor Hills neighborhoods of southwest Los Angeles County.

 

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Westchester man driving swastika-covered car arrested for illegally carrying loaded gun

 

A Westchester County man was arrested for illegally possessing a loaded semi-automatic gun after cops stopped his car that was covered in swastikas and anti-Israel messages, prosecutors said.

 

Elmsford resident Hani Saleh, 47, was taken into custody Wednesday in White Plains when police found the weapon inside his car following the traffic stop, authorities said.

 

Saleh told police he was “trying to educate the public to the true events in the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas,” according to a criminal complaint.

 

Prosecutors alleged a semi-automatic firearm that was loaded with ten .40 caliber rounds of ammunition was found under the driver’s seat of his car.

 

The hateful messages on his Volkswagen Passat included a Star of David and swastika intertwined and an American flag that had the white Nazi symbol where the 50 stars should be, according to photos from the complaint provided by the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office.

 

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Neo-Nazis Gloat as Florida Becomes a Magnet for Hate

 

Neo-Nazis have been ecstatic in the wake of their headline-grabbing action outside Orlando earlier this month. White nationalists with handles like “Dietrich,” “Red Pill,” and “Scotty Big Balls” greeted each other with shouts of “Hail victory!” on a Sept. 10 Telegram livestream. Echoing the sentiments of many participants, “Combat Carl” told listeners it was “probably the best weekend of my life.”

 

The march represented a merger of two neo-Nazi hate groups with different styles — the hard-edged BloodTribe, aka Blutstamm, whose Maine-based leader Christopher Pohlhaus has a runic face tattoo goes and goes by the name “Hammer”; and the Goyim Defense League, a meme-savvy group whose antisemitism is steeped in layers of irony, led by Jon Minadeo II, who calls himself “Handsome Truth.” This was the largest, but only the latest, of a series of high-profile neo-Nazi actions in Florida.

 

More than 50 members of both groups joined together on Sept. 2 — wearing red shirts and dark shorts, with most covering their faces with black masks. Some toted massive swastika flags, and their hate march culminated with a demonstration on a freeway overpass in Altamonte Springs, where the neo-Nazis performed stiff-armed Hitler salutes and shouted antisemitic threats like, “Jews get the rope!” 

 

Many of these haters were not Florida natives. As detailed on the livestream, they’d traveled from as far Canada and California, spending thousands of dollars on flights and hotels to participate in this show of intimidation in the Sunshine State. And this joint mobilization was augmented, on the same day, by a third neo-Nazi group that rallied just a few miles away, outside DisneyWorld. Members of the Order of the Black Sun staked out an entrance to “the most magical place on Earth,” holding placards reading: “Have you thanked Hitler today?”

 

Florida has in recent weeks been something of a magnet for hate, amid burgeoning neo-Nazi activity nationally. The dark rhetoric about hanging Jews followed just a weekend after the mass killing in Jacksonville, Florida, where the gunman, who scrawled a swastika on his AR-15 style rifle, murdered three Black victims at a Dollar General, before killing himself.

 

At each of the Labor Day weekend neo-Nazi events near Orlando, members trollishly invoked the name of the state’s governor, Ron DeSantis. The DisneyWorld Nazis waved a “DeSantis 2024” flag; a GDL member on the freeway overpass mockingly declared: “We’re all DeSantis supporters!” before adding, “**** Ron DeSantis!” 

 

Yet, unlike other Florida GOP leaders, DeSantis has not condemned the nauseating displays of hate — continuing a yearslong pattern of conspicuous silence. Critics, including the head of the Florida Democratic Party, insist that DeSantis’ unwillingness to decry such neo-Nazi actions is making him “complicit” in the state’s rising tide of hate. As the GOP governor has fashioned Florida into the place where “woke goes to die,” they insist, DeSantis is fostering an environment where hate comes to thrive.

 

”Talk to anybody from any of these marginalized communities. There is a fear on the ground,” says Nikki Fried, who was the highest ranking Jewish woman in the history of state government, stepping down from her cabinet post at the beginning of this year to lead state Democrats. She tells Rolling Stone she’s floored to be living through a moment of American history where she has to “denounce Nazis in my home state — and have a governor who refuses to do so.”

 

According to the Anti-Defamation League, Florida has seen a sharp rise in antisemitic acts. From 2019, when Desantis first took office, to 2022, incidents of anti-Jewish harassment, vandalism and assault soared from 91 to 269 according to an annual, state-by-state accounting by ADL. Antisemitism is surging nationwide, however the 196 percent increase in Florida is far greater than that of other large U.S. states with big Jewish populations, including New York (which saw a 35 percent increase) and California (57 percent). 

 

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