Content warning: This article contains graphic language, including antisemitic and racist rhetoric and descriptions of antisemitic violence. Reader discretion is advised.
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Content warning: This article contains graphic language, including antisemitic and racist rhetoric and descriptions of antisemitic violence. Reader discretion is advised.
If racist "alt-right" organizer Jason Kessler goes through with a second “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, he’ll be legally barred from being armed during any organized protests.
A South Carolina man faces 33 months in prison for his involvement in a copycat plan to emulate Dylann Roof who carried out a murderous gun rampage in 2015 at a Charleston church.
A storm involving more legal trouble could be brewing for Veterans on Patrol leader Michael Meyer, who’s been at the center of a Pizzagate-style conspiracy theory for several weeks.
Is Trump responsible for hate-crimes rise? Behind the pardon for the Hammonds; LA sheriff’s office may have harbored a racist clique; and more.
Jason Kessler will get his day in court with the city of Charlottesville, but whether he gets the permit he wants remains to be seen.
A Utah militia leader is being released from federal custody after serving two years in prison for his involvement in an antigovernment plot to bomb a remote Bureau of Land Management facility in Arizona.
Barry Byron “The Baron” Mills, widely considered one of the founding members of the violent Aryan Brotherhood prison gang syndicate, has died in the nation’s most-secure federal prison.
Longtime anti-Muslim figure Daniel Pipes and his group the Middle East Forum (MEF) recently took credit for financing a rally in London last month in support of English far-right provocateur Tommy Robinson (aka Stephen Yaxley-Lennon).
Trump blames immigrants for family separations; Hate crimes rise again in California; ‘White genocide’ is an old rallying cry for the far right; and more.
The bulk of a lawsuit against a group of alt-right activists, neo-Nazis and racists stemming from the deadly “Unite the Right” rally can go forward after a federal judge concluded that a group of Charlottesville residents “plausibly alleged” a conspiracy to engage in racial violence among the groups.