Hate Groups on the Move, Some to Unlikely Places
Hate Groups on the Move, Some to Unlikely Places
Implicated in Cops' Murder, Aryan Gang Faces New Heat
Last Sept. 20, the eyes of America turned to Jena, La., where more than 20,000 people had gathered to protest what they saw as racism in the disparate criminal treatment accorded black and white students at a local high school.
In a case that sent shock waves through Israeli society, police in September announced the arrests of a group of young neo-Nazis who allegedly attacked foreign workers from Asia, religious Jews, gay men and lesbians, the homeless and drug addicts.
A federal judge this October dismissed charges of sexual enticement of a 10-year-old girl and witness intimidation against neo-Nazi leader Kevin Alfred Strom, but only after two days of lurid and extremely compromising testimony.
The Norse god makes a rare appearance at a neo-Nazi beer bash. His son, Thor, proves something of an embarrassment
A former South African intelligence operative, once accused of pro-apartheid crimes, is shoring up a U.S. neo-Nazi group
When North East White Pride (NEWP) announced it would protest in front of Boston's Afro-American History Museum on Martin Luther King Day 2006, the New England neo-Nazis were hoping to draw a crowd and garner attention for their fledgling organization.
A near-deadly desert attack, headed for trial next spring, throws light on the incredibly brutal underworld of racist skinheads
Around Muscogee County, Ga., H. Haywood Turner III is known as the county magistrate who, during a driving altercation, brandished a pistol at a U.S. Army sergeant.
Now, more than ever, we must work together to protect the values that ensure a fair and inclusive future for all.