Hatewatch monitors and exposes the activities of the American radical right.
Subscribe to the Sounds Like Hate podcast to learn more about hate groups like the Proud Boys.
Less than a week after 17 people were killed in Parkland, Florida, RidersUSA hosted their annual Second Amendment rally as planned in Phoenix.
For years the Conservative Political Action Conference has had an extremist problem –– budding white nationalists, young and excited leaders of the racist “alt-right” and angry voices in the anti-LGBT movement all cozying up with conservative political leaders and hoping to have their voices heard.
The radical right started the year on a roll, with allies in the White House. But then came Charlottesville, and the movement was knocked back on its heels. Still, Trump's rhetoric and the country's changing demographics continue to buoy the movement
John William King insists that his tattoos of racists symbols, including one of a black man hanging from a tree, don’t mean what they appear to mean.
Oath Keepers begin guard duty — without invitation — outside an Indiana high school; Patriot Prayer founder Joey Gibson has political ambitions; a gay-bashing church in Harlem has a sign problem, and more.
An autopsy report on a New Mexico school shooter provides explicit details that contradict earlier statements by San Juan County Sheriff’s officials who dismissed suggestions the gunman had racist “alt-right” leanings.
The following is a list of activities and events of anti-LGBT organizations. Organizations listed as anti-LGBT hate groups are designated with an asterisk.
William Henry Fears was indicted in the state of Texas’s Harris County District Court on February 20, 2018 for “Assault of Family Member - Impeding Breathing.”
Richard Mack, the leader of the antigovernment “constitutional sheriffs” movement, said on Thursday that some of the teenage survivors of last week’s high school massacre in Florida have been using the “exact same kind of language” as Hitler when it comes to pushing for tighter restrictions on guns.
As with so many mass shootings before, the fringe right is racing once again to generate some theory — any theory — to cast doubt on the circumstances of last week’s Parkland, Florida, shooting.
Subscriptions to the Intel Report are free to law enforcement, journalists, and others.
We tracked 1,430 hate and extremist groups in 2023. Hate has no place in our country. Add your name to help us fight hate.