[Congressional Record Volume 152, Number 75 (Tuesday, June 13, 2006)]
[House]
[Pages H3791-H3795]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HATE CRIMES
Mr. BACA. Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker. The topic I want to talk
about this morning is hate crimes. As immigration debate has
intensified, white supremists, neo-Nazis, and other racists have
increased their efforts to spread the racist message. White supremists
have not simply expressed racist convictions but have urged others and
white Americans generally to fight back against perceived invasion of
white United States by Hispanics from Mexico. The rhetoric has grown
increasingly by radicals, and their success is spreading and has been
coupled with a rise in hate crimes across our country. And I state,
across the country.
Police reports document a growing number of acts of violence by far
right extremists against Hispanics regardless of their status as
citizens, whether they are profiling them, making remarks, creating
different kinds of attitude and atmosphere and hate. The Anti-
Defamation League, a nonprofit that fights anti-Semitism and other
biases, put out a report last month that said hateful and racist
rhetoric aimed at Latino immigrants had grown to a level unprecedented
in recent years.
The report detailed numerous examples of hate crimes, including two
men in Tennessee who were sentenced to prison in December for
shattering a window and painting Nazi symbols in a local Mexican
market. Near Houston, two white teenagers were arrested in April
accused of beating a Latino youth and sodomizing him with a pipe. Days
later on Long Island, a white teen was accused of threatening two
Latinos with a machete and a chain saw. Police say ethnic slurs were
used in each case.
We must condemn these kind of acts and work to promote a unified
America, work to promote a unified America. Even the President has
warned us of the dangerous rhetoric being used in discussions on
immigration. During his speech last month he noted, ``America needs to
conduct this debate on immigration in a reasonable and respective tone.
We cannot build a unified country by inciting people to anger or
playing on anyone's fear or exploiting the issue of immigration for
political gains.'' And I state, exploiting it for political gains.
The white supremists are employing sophisticated techniques to spread
their message over the Internet including blogs, chat rooms, and racist
and violent video games. And as you can see by the poster out here,
Border Patrol, I recently heard about a racist game distributed freely
on the Internet called the ``Border Patrol'' that encourages players to
shoot at immigrants as they cross the United States, as you can see
right here. These games first surfaced in the year 2002, but have come
up once again and aimed at immigration debate.
The Border Patrol games. In the game the Border Patrol, Mexican
Americans are incarcerated and presented with disgusting and harmful
stereotypes. The game does not present them as hard-working individuals
who come to this country, like any other who has come to this country
before, to build better opportunity. This country is built on
immigrants, and many individuals come here for that reason, not for the
reason displayed in this Border Patrol display that we have out here.
People have come to contribute to our country and will continue to
come to contribute to this country because they believe in America and
its principles and what it stands for. Instead, you can see from the
poster that Mexican American immigrants are labeled as bandoleer-
wearing Mexican nationalists, tattoo-touting drug smugglers, and
pregnant breeders who must be kept out at any cost.
In the second poster, as you can see out here, Border Patrol 2, as
you can see by the second poster the object of the Internet game Border
Patrol is to shoot Mexican immigrants as they try to cross the borders
into the United States. Here, again, we are talking about hate crimes,
attitudes and behavior by individuals. Here, a family is being targeted
as they rush past a sign that reads, ``Welcome to the United States.''
The sign contains the American flag in which the stars representing 50
states have been replaced with a Jewish Star of David, and a small sign
that appears below that says, ``Welfare Office'' with an arrow.
[[Page H3792]]
These games are not only obscene, it incites anger and violence in
the minds of children and creates attitude and behavior changes.
Psychologically then people begin to think in terms of hating anyone of
color. And when you hate people of color, you demonstrate hate and
anger. The fact that the national immigration debate is fueling their
efforts in is downright scary.
Border Patrol is one of several racist computer games that hate
groups are currently offering for sale or download on the Internet.
Other games like Ethnic Cleansing, Drive By 2, and African Detroit Cop
were created to further racism, anti-Semitic, and other opinions.
These images on poster number three is Save The Last Dance. This
image contains an altered movie poster. The actual film featured an
interracial romance between teenagers. As you note in the version of
this poster, the African-American male is depicted by a gorilla. The
poster also spreads a traditional anti-Semitic attack that blames Jews
for controlling the American media and suggests that a film about
interracial tolerance and mutual respect is somehow Jewish propaganda.
The most obvious message of this poster is that the way to deal with
members of minority groups, as well as whites who have relationships
with them, is with violence.
It only takes one individual with hate in his heart to act on these
notions. For us, that is a very real concern as the national discussion
on immigration continues to gain momentum. We cannot have this debate
at the expense of the safety of immigrants in our communities and total
Americans who are here in the United States.
I understand that not everyone in Congress agrees with a more
inclusive vision of the American family or the American dream to be
here in the United States and to have what everybody else has and to
build a better life for themselves. Instead of recognizing the needs
for real comprehensive immigration reform, some Republicans have viewed
this issue to play on people's fear and exploit the debate for their
political gains. I hope that people understand what is going on now and
at the national level.
Extremists Declare `Open Season' on Immigrants: Hispanics Target of
Incitement and Violence
Overview
As the public debate over immigration reform has taken
center-stage in American politics and public life, white
supremacists, neo-Nazis and other racists have declared
``open season'' on immigrants and attempted to co-opt and
exploit the controversy by focusing their efforts--and their
anger--on the minority group at the center of the
controversy: Hispanics.
As a result, to a level unprecedented in recent years,
America's Latino immigrant population has become the primary
focus of hateful and racist rhetoric and extreme violence--
aided, abetted and encouraged by America's white supremacist
and racist haters.
Spurred in recent weeks by the debate on Capitol Hill and
the groundswell of grassroots activism in support of
America's immigrant community, extremists have become
increasingly emboldened by, and fixated on, the controversy
over immigration policy, encouraging their supporters to
capitalize on the issue by encouraging antiimmigrant
activism, and even violence against all Hispanics.
While white supremacists have for many years attempted to
exploit rising anti-immigration sentiments in the U.S., the
level and intensity of their attacks against Hispanics has
reached dangerous new highs, with right-wing extremists
joining anti-immigration groups, distributing anti-immigrant
propaganda and holding frequent antiimmigration rallies and
protests.
As a result, Hispanics, regardless of their citizenship or
immigration status, increasingly are becoming the targets of
hatred and violence from hardcore white supremacists.
Racists ranging from neo-Nazis to Klansmen to racist
skinheads are among the most active anti-immigration
activists in the country. Motivating their actions is the
core conviction of modern white supremacist ideology: That
the white race itself is threatened with extinction by a
``rising tide of color'' controlled and manipulated by Jews.
This following report examines the recent record of extreme
rhetoric and violence from white supremacist groups and their
followers that has played out against the backdrop of the
immigration debate in America.
White Supremacist Anti-Immigration Protests
White supremacists have taken to the streets in a
deliberate attempt to attract publicity and to exploit and
co-opt the national discussion on immigration for their own
hateful purposes. Viewing immigration as a ``wedge'' issue
through which they believe they can foist their racist and
anti-Semitic views on the American public, and attract
recruits and attention for themselves, white supremacists
have organized a number of rallies and protests with anti-
immigration and anti-Hispanic themes.
Many of the extremist events have taken place in southern
states. There, white supremacists hope to exploit anti-
immigration sentiment that has risen as a result of a
significant influx of Hispanic immigrants, primarily
agricultural workers, into areas of the South that had never
before had a substantial Hispanic population.
Demonstrations, rallies and other events taking place in
spring 2006 included:
In Seattle, Washington, and Las Vegas, Nevada, members of
the neo-Nazi National Vanguard held anti-immigration protests
on May 20. On its Web site, the National Vanguard declared
that day to be a ``day of protest against George W. Bush's
plan to destroy America,'' calling the president's
immigration proposals a ``sellout of the nation.'' In
Seattle, neo-Nazis appeared along Interstate 1-5, displaying
signs for motorists stuck in traffic to read. In Las Vegas,
white supremacists held a small rally in front of the federal
courthouse.
In Keene, New Hampshire, New England members of the
Arkansas-based neo-Nazi group White Revolution held a self-
described ``anti-invasion'' demonstration on May 7 to protest
``the invasion of America by illegal non white hordes.''
Members of other white supremacist groups, ranging from the
National Socialist Movement to the American Front, also
showed up.
In Russellville, Alabama, members of the Alabama chapter of
the Indiana-based National Knights of the Ku Klux Klan held
an anti-immigration rally on May 6, yelling ``Let's get rid
of the Mexicans!'' National Knights leader Ray Larsen was on
hand, telling the crowd that gathered that immigrants ``want
you out of here because they want this as their land.'' After
the rally, the Klansmen burned a cross in a field outside of
town.
In Montgomery, Alabama, the neo-Confederate group League of
the South and the Coalition against Illegal Immigration
together organized an anti-immigration ``Cinco de Mayo''
demonstration on May 5. Promoting the event in his racist and
anti-Semitic newspaper First Freedom, Olaf Childress wrote
that he planned to be there, ``maybe even with a baseball
bat. Already got a placard in mind: MEX GET THE HELL OUT OF
MY COUNTRY.'' Childress did show up with such a placard and a
baseball bat, telling a local reporter that ``Jewish
supremacists'' had a plan to abolish the borders of the U.S.
Other signs at the demonstration displayed slogans such as
``multi-culturalism is liberal insanity.'' In Greenville,
South Carolina, the racist Council of Conservative
Citizens held an anti-immigration demonstration on April
29 in front of the offices of Republican Congressman
Lindsey Graham, where they burned Mexican flags and
displayed signs such as ``More INS, Less IRS,'' ``Vote for
Pedro to Go Home,'' and ``I Didn't Fight in Iraq for
Illegal Aliens.''
White supremacists also showed up to counter events
organized by immigration and human rights activists, in
particular the May 1 ``Day without Immigrants'' events
organized around the country by immigrant rights activists.
In San Angelo, Texas, members of the Empire Knights of the Ku
Klux Klan showed up to counter local events. In Dayton, Ohio,
half a dozen members of the neo-Nazi National Socialist
Movement appeared in Nazi uniforms at a pro-immigration march
to protest, in their words, ``the illegal wetback scum and
Shabbat goy mud lovers.'' In Madison, Wisconsin, in April,
members of the neo-Nazi New Order passed out literature at an
immigrant rights event at the capitol.
Even where white supremacists have not shown up in person,
they have plastered communities around the country with crude
anti-Hispanic and anti-immigration fliers. In Bakersfield,
California, for example, one community was littered with
National Vanguard fliers that read ``Civilization: One Job
Mexicans Won't Do.'' Residents of Pasadena, Texas, discovered
racist fliers that urged people to burn down the homes of
people thought to be illegal immigrants.
Border Vigilante Group Events
Anti-immigration border vigilante groups have also
organized anti-immigrant events around the country this
spring. The largest border vigilante group, the Minuteman
Project, held a reprise in April of their 2005 vigilante
border patrols along the Arizona-Mexico border, and followed
up with a caravan that staged anti-immigration events across
the country. One Minuteman event in Birmingham, Alabama, was
organized by Mike Vanderboegh, a former militia leader. At
the rally, an attendee distributed copies of Olaf Childress's
racist and anti-Semitic newspaper, First Freedom. Other anti-
immigration groups held rallies from Arizona to Minnesota.
Anti-immigration groups have also turned to publicity
stunts. The Minutemen, for example, declared on May 9 that
they would start building their own ``border security fence''
on private property along the border with Mexico, unless the
federal government itself deployed the military or erected
such fencing. The Minutemen claimed that they had received
nearly $200,000 in donations to build such a fence. Other
border vigilante groups have already begun or announced
similar projects.
[[Page H3793]]
The Rhetoric: Declaring ``Open Season'' on Immigrants
White supremacists have not simply expressed racist
convictions, but have urged each other and white Americans
generally, to ``fight back'' against the perceived invasion
of the ``white'' United States by Hispanics from Mexico.
The rhetoric in such pronouncements has grown increasingly
radical. ``Beaner Brown Supremacist Militias of Latino
Communist immigrants firmly intend to conquer [the
southwest],'' suggested a topic heading on the white
supremacist Legion of Saints message board recently. ``Will
White Americans sit back, watch it happen & let them do it?
Or will White Americans `remember the Alamo!?' ''
Such voices are unfortunately hardly isolated. Here are
just a few recent examples:
Alabaman Larry Darby, a Holocaust denier and candidate for
Alabama attorney general, recently stated in a May 3
interview on Alabama Public Television that he wanted
National Guard troops on the border with orders to ``shoot to
kill, absolutely . . . we are at war, we are being invaded by
a foreign country, we are at war.''
James Wickstrom and Frances Farrell, the virulently racist
and anti-Semitic hosts of the ``Yahweh's Truth'' radio
program, blamed Jews for the immigration ``invasion'' on his
May 3 broadcast. Wickstrom claimed that pro-immigrant marches
were being organized and financed by ``communist Jews'' and
the ``communist Catholic church,'' and that Jewish
organizations are ``criminal accomplices of these illegal
aliens.'' Farrell suggested that ``one attack on one of their
marches with automatic weapons or even just rifles will put a
stop to them and the time's coming when this is going to
happen.''
One member of an Aryan Nations faction, ``Pastor'' Jay
Faber of Pennsylvania, claimed on April 10 on the Aryan
Nations Internet forum that ``I already know they will not
throw one of these stumpy little brown beasts out of here, so
for the amount of guats in my area, I have at least 10 rounds
of ammunition for each of them.''
Aryan Nations faction leader August Kreis in October 2005
claimed on his Web site that ``this infestation of
cockroaches need deportation or extermination!'' If legal
means of ``stopping this rising tide'' were not enough,
``then these brown squat monsters should begin to turn up
dead all across Amerika . . . We now have another game animal
to add to our list of available targets for our favorite
pastime, hunting, and we'll declare permanent open season on
these dirty wetbacks! From what I have heard through the
grapevine the Skinheads and Klans across the country are more
than prepared for this type of action. I say let's play by
state and see which state can claim the most kills and let
the jewsmedia whores keep score!''
Oregon National Socialist Movement leader Jim Ramm wrote in
June 2005 that ``the browner invasion is much like a
cancerous tumor that should of [sic] been removed. But
instead, it was allowed to grow and infect other organs . . .
as this brown disease rages out of control the white patient
faces racial death.''
Kevin Strom, leader of the neo-Nazi National Vanguard, gave
a shortwave radio broadcast in June 2005 in which he claimed
that ``These Mestizo invaders are so different from us that
by mixing with them or being dispossessed by them we will
cease to live, we will cease to be ourselves or have a place
to exist to support the lives of our future generations. And
that is the crucial reason why this invasion must be
stopped.''
``AliisioRex,'' a member of the neo-Nazi web forum
Stormfront, wrote in July 2005 that ``they are barbarians,
they are our enemies, they want to destroy our civilization
and we have to fight them. We need to organize better and be
more open activists; otherwise, I only see race war in the
future.'' Another Stormfronter, ``Strasser,'' wrote in
November 2005 that ``White minorityhood on a national level
is a very real possibility. How can White folk tolerate this?
Do they care that most minority populations become a cultural
hostage? What is the interest in having their children a
minority on a mestizo dominated campus? Mestizo immigration
is going to force White America to make some very important
decisions.''
Such statements appear routinely on white supremacist Web
sites and in white supremacist literature.
Perhaps the white supremacist most active in explicitly
advocating extreme violence against Hispanics is New Jersey
racist radio talk show host Hal Turner. He reserves his most
extreme statements to urge violence against illegal
immigrants from Mexico:
May 3, 2006: Following the May 1 demonstrations, Turner
posted to his Web site a 145-page ``ethnic cleansing manual''
that he said explained ``in graphic detail why white people
need to prepare to ethnically cleanse this nation and how to
do it using force and violence.''
October 31, 2005: ``Slowly but surely we are headed toward
the solution that I have been advocating for years: kill
illegal aliens as they cross into the U.S. When the stench of
rotting corpses gets bad enough, the rest will stay away.''
October 11, 2005: ``For years I have been publicly
advocating on my radio show and this web site, that Mexican
illegal aliens be shot dead as they cross into the U.S.
illegally . . . I plant the seeds verbally and the seeds grow
in the minds of others . . . I am proud to advocate even more
killings!''
July 15, 2005: ``I once again advocate extreme violence
against Mexicans . . . Once they're dead, their heads should
be cut off and put on pike poles as a warning to others.''
May 17, 2005, responding to news that a restaurant owned by
the mayor of Denver had employed an illegal alien who
allegedly murdered a police officer: ``. . . his policy of
affording sanctuary to other illegal aliens makes Mayor John
Hickenlooper worthy of being killed. I sincerely hope that
someone takes a rifle with a scope and puts a bullet through
[his] head.''
May 15, 2005: ``I advocate extreme violence against illegal
aliens . . . I think it would be terrific to trap them by
their ankles in steel bear traps then beat them to death when
you return and find them in the trap . . . Oh, if any
American sides with the illegals--like a big mouth politician
or a politically correct, ass-kissing local sheriff, lawyers,
judges, or the like--it would be a real public service to
kill them too!''
Anti-Immigration Groups
The violent rhetoric has not come only from explicitly
white supremacist groups, but also from members and leaders
of anti-immigration groups. Anti-immigration activist Fred
Puckett, the leader of ``Minuteman of One,'' was caught on
camera in late April telling an undercover reporter for a
local Phoenix television station that ``once you shoot a
couple of these sons of bitches, they'll think twice.''
Perhaps most strikingly, Arizona anti-immigration activist
Laine Lawless, who has been associated with several border
vigilante groups and eventually started the group Border
Guardians in 2005, sent an e-mail in April to a prominent
Ohio member of the neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement, Mark
Martin, asking him to pass its contents on to his white
supremacist contacts. Martin did so, forwarding the message
to several white supremacist forums on Yahoo and Usenet in
early April, but unfortunately for Lawless, Martin ignored
the part of her message which read, ``Please don't use my
name,'' and instead forwarded the message in full.
Lawless's e-mail, titled, ``how to get rid of them,'' urged
a variety of intimidating, harassing, and even illegal and
violent tactics to intimidate immigrants into leaving the
U.S., including cutting down the broadcast tower for a
Spanish language radio station near Phoenix and stealing
money from illegal aliens. ``I hear the red necks in the
South are beating up illegals as the textile mills have
closed,'' she wrote. ``Use your imagination.''
Lawless's suggestions were consistent with previous
statements she had made, including a late March posting to an
anti-immigration Internet forum in which she wrote that ``my
Southern friend tells me the rednecks in the South just beat
[illegal aliens] up. Unfortunately, there are too many of
them to use that tactic there any more.''
Earlier, in February, Lawless posted to a Texas Minuteman
message forum that ``We need borders to . . . preserve our
culture, instead of accepting any kind of flotsam and jetsam
that seeks to float into our territory.''
Mark Martin himself seemed willing to personally engage in
intimidating tactics. In early May, he admitted in a Google
Internet forum that he and another member of the National
Socialist Movement had passed out racist fliers in Covington,
Ohio, at houses ``surrounding a suspected illegal Mexican
jobsite.'' The two neo-Nazis also approached workers at the
jobsite and demanded to see identification from them. When
workers refused, Martin allegedly told one of them that he
``was an illegal, wetback who was stealing American jobs and
. . . spreading disease.'' Workers called the police, who
told the neo-Nazis to leave or be charged with harassment.
The Violence: Growing Number of Assaults
Not surprisingly, white supremacists have not limited their
actions to hateful or even violent rhetoric. The past several
years have seen a growing number of violent assaults and
attacks by white supremacists against legal and illegal
Hispanic immigrants, as well as Hispanic American citizens.
The crimes have ranged from vicious vandalism to brutal
assaults and murders. In most cases, the perpetrators did not
even know the victims, but targeted them solely because of
their appearance.
Only a minority of hate crimes are committed by ideological
extremists, but such extremists have committed some of the
worst hate crimes in America. The increased willingness of
such white supremacists, especially racist skinheads, to
attack Hispanics represents a dangerous and disturbing trend.
Here are some of the hate crimes committed by white
supremacists against Hispanics in the U.S. in the past three
years.
April 29, 2006, New York. A teenager was arrested in East
Hampton, Long Island, after he allegedly threatened a
Hispanic teenager with a machete and chased a second teenager
with a chain saw while shouting racial epithets. Described by
classmates as a skinhead, the alleged perpetrator had
previously posted to the Internet photographs of himself
posing as a Nazi and adorning a shed with swastikas. He and
two others, whom police have allegedly linked to the
incident, were suspended from school.
April 22, 2006, Texas. David Henry Tuck. 18, and Keith
Robert Turner, 17, were arrested and charged with aggravated
sexual assault in the brutal attack of a teenage Hispanic
[[Page H3794]]
high school student in Houston. The victim was beaten and
sodomized with a plastic pipe from a patio umbrella, then
kicked in the head with steel-toed boots. He was left with
head wounds and major internal injuries. The victim had
bleach poured on him and was burned with cigarettes.
Witnesses allegedly stopped the attackers from carving
something onto the victim's chest. Tuck is a self-described
skinhead who sports Nazi tattoos. In 2003, at age 14, Tuck
and two adult white supremacists were implicated in the
racially motivated beating of a Hispanic man, according to
court records and witnesses. The two adults received federal
and state sentences for their role; juvenile records are not
public in Texas.
January 2006, California. Ryan Nicholas Newsome, a member
of the Another Order white supremacist gang, pleaded no
contest on January 20, 2006, to assault charges in Yuba
County. He pleaded no contest to assault with force likely to
cause great bodily injury with a criminal street gang
enhancement as a result of an August 2005 incident, in which
he and an associate allegedly assaulted a Hispanic man.
December 2005, Tennessee. A Blount County judge on December
1, 2005, sentenced Jacob Allen Reynolds and Thomas Matthew
Lovett to four years in prison and six months in prison (and
two and a half on probation) respectively after they pleaded
guilty to vandalizing a Mexican food store in Maryville on
May 7, 2005, causing over $17,000 in damages. The men
allegedly broke windows and a refrigerator, vandalized a car,
and spraypainted Nazi symbols on the store. Three others
charged still await trial.
November 2005, Texas. Christopher Chubasco Wilkins, a
prison escapee, was recaptured on November 5 and charged with
murdering three men in the Fort Worth area during his month-
long escape. Wilkins, who is according to police a self-
proclaimed white separatist heavily tattooed with a variety
of white supremacist tattoos. including a portrait of Adolf
Hitler, is alleged to have killed two Hispanic men and one
African-American man by gunshots to the head. Police are
examining a possible racial motive. Wilkins had been living
at a halfway house in Houston, after being released from
federal prison, and left the house without permission.
November 2005, Tennessee. A federal judge sentenced former
Klansman Daniel James Schertz to 14 years in prison for
selling pipe bombs to a person he thought would use them to
kill Mexican and Haitian immigrants. The person turned out to
be an undercover informant. Schertz, a former corrections
officer and member of the North Georgia White Knights of the
Ku Klux Klan, pleaded guilty to making five pipe bombs to be
used to blow up a bus carrying Mexican workers. Later,
Schertz expressed gratitude that the government had stopped
him, but said, ``We should have people here who know how to
speak English. They are over here illegally and nothing gets
done to them.''
October 2005, California. A Sacramento man and two other
suspects who allegedly attacked and injured six people in a
hate-crime spree at two local parties were arrested in the
early morning of October 16, 2005. Ryan Marino, 22, posted
bail from El Dorado County Jail later Sunday after being
charged on four counts of assault with a deadly weapon with
an extenuating circumstance of a hate crime. He allegedly
used brass knuckles after shouting epithets against Hispanics
and proclaiming ``white pride'' at a home Sunday evening.
Party attendees later identified Marino, who police said
crashed the parties with the intent of ``beating up
Mexicans.''
September 2005, Utah. A federal judge on September 27,
2005, sentenced Lance Vanderstappen to 20 years in prison for
trying to kill a Hispanic man while in a holding cell in July
2005 awaiting sentencing for a racketeering charge. The
victim had stab wounds to his neck, throat and chest. In
court, Vanderstappen, a member of the notorious Soldiers of
Aryan Culture white supremacist prison gang, admitted that he
targeted the victim because he was Hispanic, saying ``I
intentionally tried to kill him.'' Vanderstappen pleaded
guilty to attempted murder.
September 2005, New Jersey. Joseph Schmidt of Little Egg
Harbor received a sentence of three years' probation in
September 2005 after pleading guilty in June to two counts of
bias intimidation, two counts of aggravated assault, two
counts of criminal mischief, two counts of possessing weapons
for an unlawful purpose, and simple assault. The charges were
related to a string of attacks on minorities, primarily
Hispanics, in Ocean County in 2003. Schmidt, a member of the
white supremacist skinhead group East Coast Hate Crew,
received a light sentence because he had cooperated with
authorities in prosecuting other members of the group. Three
others involved in the incident pleaded guilty and one was
acquitted. Others have yet to go to trial.
July 2005, California. Four people, three men and one
woman, were arrested in Riverside, California, on July 11-12,
2005, charged with making terrorist threats with a hate crime
enhancement. Some of the people arrested had ``white pride''
tattoos, according to authorities, who also seized a variety
of white supremacist items. According to police, the suspects
drove to a home and challenged several Hispanics there to a
fight, threatening them and using racial slurs. A similar
episode occurred the next night. According to police, the
people arrested claimed no particular group affiliation but
said they were proud to be ``members of the Aryan race.''
May 2005, Arizona. White supremacist Steve Boggs was
sentenced to death on May 13, 2005, for murdering three fast-
food workers in Mesa, Arizona, in 2002 during a robbery. He
had been convicted of three counts of first-degree murder and
various robbery, burglary and kidnapping charges. Boggs shot
the victims, a Native American and two Hispanics, then
stuffed their bodies into a freezer at the store. Boggs wrote
to a Mesa police detective that he had wanted to ``rid the
world of a few needless illegals. I don't feel sorry.''
Another defendant still awaits trial. According to
prosecutors, the two men were members of a small hate group
they called the Imperial Royal Guard.
May 2005, Texas. Two racist skinheads pleaded guilty on May
5, 2005, to a racially motivated beating of a Hispanic man in
January 2003. Douglas Brannan of Hockley and Mark Fletcher
Smith of Spring, both sporting many white supremacist
tattoos, were convicted of civil rights violations. The two
men, and a teenager, had attacked a Hispanic customer at a
gas station, beating him and kicking him with steel-toed
boots until he was unconscious while shouting ``border
jumper,'' ``spic,'' and ``we kill people like you.'' Brannan
received a five year sentence and Smith a three year
sentence.
December 2004, California. Ten racist skinheads from
Redlands and Riverside attacked three Hispanics in the
parking lot of a topless bar on December 29, 2004. According
to police, they assaulted the men while yelling racial slurs
at them and identifying themselves as members of skinhead
groups. No arrests have yet been made.
November 2004, Wisconsin. Mark Lentz of Sheldon, Wisconsin,
received a three-month sentence and two years of probation,
as well as 40 hours of community service, after pleading no
contest to a misdemeanor hate crime. Lentz was the last of
four racist skinheads to be sentenced for luring a Hispanic
man outside a bar in Waukesha, then hitting him on the head
with a bottle and repeatedly kicking him. Mark Davis II of
Watertown earlier received a 3\1/2\ year sentence and two
years of extended supervision, Kasey Bieri received an 18-
month jail term and three years of probation, and Jeffrey
Gerloski received four months in jail and two years
probation.
June 2004, Texas. Ranch Rescue member Casey Nethercott was
convicted by a Texas jury of felony firearm possession in
connection with an attack on two illegal immigrants from El
Salvador outside of Hebbronville, Texas, in 2003. He was
sentenced to five years in prison. The two immigrants (now in
the U.S. legally) successfully sued Nethercott and others
involved in the incident for a total judgment of $1,450,000.
November 2003, Idaho. Aryan Nations member Zachary Beck was
arrested for felony malicious harassment as a hate crime for
attacking a Hispanic male in the parking lot of a supermarket
after asking if the victim was Mexican. While awaiting trial
on that charge, he was later re-arrested after allegedly
shooting at a police officer in Longview, Washington, during
a standoff. He still awaits trial on the alleged crimes.
June 2003, California. Two racist skinheads, Waylon Kennell
and James Grlicky, were convicted in separate trials for the
brutal beating of a Mexican migrant worker in San Diego in
the fall of 2003. Grlicky was convicted of attempted murder,
conspiracy, robbery, assault and battery, with a hate crime
enhancement. Kennell was convicted of assault causing great
bodily injury and battery with serious bodily injury.
According to the prosecutor in the case, the two went hunting
for a ``beaner'' to beat and rob. They kicked the victim in
the head around a dozen times, including ``curbstomping''
him--kicking down on the back of the head when the victim's
open mouth is placed against a concrete curb (emulating a
scene in the movie ``American History X''). The victim
suffered brain damage as a result of the attack.
May 2003, New Hampshire. Aryan Nations member Russell
Seace, Jr., of Hampton Beach, pleaded guilty on May 27 to
being a felon in possession of a firearm as part of a plea
bargain with the federal government. In exchange for money,
Seace had agreed to kill a Hispanic inmate after he was
released, in retaliation for an alleged attack by the
Hispanic man on a white prison inmate.
February 2003, Oregon. A Mexican landscaper in Beaverton
was beaten with a baseball bat, robbed, and told to ``go back
home,'' by a man with a shaved head and a coat with ``KKK''
on it. Baseball bats are one of the weapons preferred by
racist skinheads. Authorities posted a reward but were unable
to make an arrest in the crime.
Anti-Immigration Activists and White Supremacists
It is not surprising that the most radical anti-Hispanic
sentiment is coming from white supremacists; however, there
are other groups joining the anti-Hispanic crusade. With
mounting public awareness and concern over illegal
immigration in America, the issue is also being exploited by
extreme anti-immigration activists, some of whom are reaching
out to white supremacists. The rhetoric of these activists is
largely aimed at Mexicans, not other illegal aliens, and
frequently does not distinguish between Mexicans and Mexican-
Americans.
This extreme end of the anti-immigration movement includes
both anti-Hispanic hate groups masquerading as immigration
reform
[[Page H3795]]
groups as well as vigilante border patrol groups, who conduct
armed patrols along the borders of the United States. Several
border vigilantes have been arrested on weapons charges.
Casey Nethercott, for example, associated with border
vigilante groups such as Ranch Rescue and the Arizona Guard,
is currently serving a five-year prison term on weapons
charges stemming from a 2003 incident in which he and others
confronted and assaulted two Salvadorans when on ``patrol.''
The vigilante border patrol groups have operated for
several years but have expanded greatly in the past twelve
months, spurred on by the media attention given to the so-
called ``Minuteman Project.'' In April 2005, Chris Simcox,
who founded the Arizona-based Civil Homeland Defense, a
border vigilante group, and Jim Gilchrist, based in
California, joined forces to create the Minuteman Project,
whose purpose was to gather thousands of volunteers for a
month-long watch for illegal border crossers in Arizona. The
project, which was highly publicized among right-wing
extremists and white supremacists, attracted far fewer
volunteers, many of them armed, during its first week.
However, the publicity generated by the event resulted in
numerous Minuteman chapters and spinoffs forming across
America, even in states such as New York, Virginia, Vermont,
and Illinois. These groups use the same radical rhetoric:
that the United States is being ``invaded'' by Mexicans who
must be stopped.
That message was clear at a three-day summit, ``Unite to
Fight Against Illegal Immigration,'' held in Las Vegas,
Nevada, in May 2005. More than 400 anti-immigration activists
gathered at the event to hear speakers describe illegal
immigrants as ``the enemy within'' and ``illegal
barbarians,'' while suggesting that America was ``at war''
with illegal immigrants and urging people to ``take America
back.''
Many of these anti-immigrant extremists have switched their
focus from the border to day laborer centers, where they
photograph Hispanics whom they assume are illegal aliens.
This racial profiling has also occurred at fast food
restaurants and other businesses where Hispanics are employed
across the United States. White supremacist and anti-
government groups continue to express interest and take part
in these activities, and their rhetoric has become more and
more confrontational.
Internet Video Games Target Hispanics
Extremists have shown a renewed interest in populating the
Internet with links to video games that target
Hispanics, portraying them not as productive contributors
to society, but as objects of scorn, derision and hate.
Shoot-to-kill video games such as ``Border Patrol,'' a game
created in Flash that is easily accessible on the Internet
through extremist Web sites, have become increasingly popular
among those opposed to immigration and are widely shared
among extremists in the United States. This has especially
been the case as the national discussion over immigration has
gathered force.
In ``Border Patrol''--one of the more popular Flash games
available on the Internet through various extremist Web
sites--the object is to ``kill'' caricatures of Mexicans as
they attempt to cross the border and gain entry to the U.S.
Players control a gun and are charged with killing
stereotypical Mexicans. Targets include a ``Mexican
nationalist,'' who carries a Mexican flag and a pistol; a
``Drug smuggler,'' wearing a sombrero and carrying a bag of
marijuana on his back; and finally a ``Breeder''--a pregnant
woman who has two small children in tow. Aside from the
virulently anti-Hispanic themes within the game, it also
hints at anti-Semitic myths such as ``Jewish control'' of the
U.S. through an image where the border is represented by a
bullet-ridden sign showing an American flag whose 50 stars
have been replaced by a single Jewish Star of David.
Under this sign, another small sign directs the Mexicans to
a ``Welfare Office.'' The player ``wins'' when he or she has
made 88 kills. The number 88 has significance to neo-Nazis,
who use it as shorthand for ``Heil Hitler'' (``H'' is the
eighth letter of the alphabet).
``Border Patrol'' was first created in 2002 by the now-
defunct website ``Zine 14,'' and was soon being copied and
distributed by extremists and others. In March 2003, the neo-
Nazi Aryan Nations group and Christian Identity preacher
James Wickstrom both linked to copies of this game from the
front pages of their Web sites. In recent months, the game
has enjoyed a resurgence in popularity, largely due to neo-
Nazis trying to capitalize on the national immigration
debate. Neo-Nazi leader Tom Metzger posted the game on his
Web site, and other extremists have linked to it and promoted
it on fringe online discussion groups.
Games, music and cartoons are some of the methods extremist
groups rely on as part of their efforts to reach a younger
audience and to expose them to their hateful ideas and
beliefs. Cartoon-like Flash games are seen as ideal for this
task, because they are small and easy to create and share
over the Internet, or enclose in an email message. In recent
years, extremist groups such as the neo-Nazi National
Alliance have also created more sophisticated video games,
such as ``Ethnic Cleansing,'' a game available on CD-ROM that
also engages in the stereotyping and demonizing of Hispanics.
Their aim is to attact unsuspecting users to extremist Web
sites, where they can be exposed to the message and goals of
the hate groups.
Such games are tools that extremists increasingly use to
desensitize people against acts of violence, to portray hate
crimes as something to be celebrated, to dehumanize America's
Hispanic population and to draw attention to their cause
using the new technologies available to them on the Internet.
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