Content warning: This article contains graphic language, including hateful anti-immigrant rhetoric. Reader discretion is advised.
Content warning: This article contains graphic language, including hateful anti-immigrant rhetoric. Reader discretion is advised.
Behind the shield of anonymity, members of a neo-Confederate hate group appeared to have emerged without consequences for their participation in a deadly Virginia rally. But that shield has vanished.
John Tanton, the racist architect of the modern anti-immigrant movement, has left behind a legacy that spawned more than a dozen nativist organizations, driven an anti-immigrant agenda for four decades, and found friends in the White House.
A small Facebook campaign predicated on keeping Confederate monuments in place has morphed into a group of more than 200 ardent, secretive separatists planning to make the South a separate nation. And Hatewatch has learned the identities of some of the group鈥檚 leaders and members.
Judge Richard Moore imposed a sentence of 419 years plus life on James Alex Fields Jr., convicted of murder after the racist 鈥淯nite the Right鈥 rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017.
Julian Austin Calfy, a suspect in the , served five years of a 16-year sentence for terroristic threatening and criminal possession of explosive material, Hatewatch has learned.
A long string of felony charges and a tip-off from the Department of Homeland Security led to the arrest of a Florida man for racist and antisemitic threats posted to Gab and Bitchute.
A neo-Nazi sympathizer from Ohio received two consecutive and 27 concurrent life sentences听in federal prison for killing a counterprotester and injuring others in the aftermath of 2017鈥檚 racist 鈥淯nite the Right鈥 rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Neo-Nazis, white nationalists and antigovernment extremists are publishing volumes of propaganda advocating terrorism and mass shootings on Telegram, a Hatewatch review of hundreds of channels on that app reveals.
Three members of the Shieldwall Network (SWN), an Arkansas-based white nationalist group founded by longtime movement leader Billy Roper, were 听in connection with second-degree battery.
Transphobic rhetoric, some of it violent, appears to be increasing among white nationalists and neo-Nazis as the fight for transgender rights gains visibility and public support.
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