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蜜桃传媒 Intelligence Report: Deadly Spring of Radical-Right Violence Examined

The new issue of the 蜜桃传媒 Intelligence Report examines three radical-right murder sprees that left a dozen victims dead, and explores the recent standoff between heavily armed militiamen and federal agents in Nevada.

Extremists from various segments of the radical right lashed out this spring with three murder sprees that left a dozen victims dead 鈥 mass murders that are explored in the of the Southern Poverty Law Center鈥檚 , released today.

The three high-profile attacks were each driven by hatred of a distinct target: the government, women and the Jewish community.

The Fall 2014 issue of the quarterly investigative journal also features a behind-the-scenes account of the standoff last April between federal agents and heavily armed militiamen at a Nevada ranch 鈥 a militia 鈥渧ictory鈥 that emboldened the antigovernment movement and led to new confrontations.

鈥淭he lesson from this past spring is that the radical right poses a very real and deadly threat, one that should not be taken lightly by law enforcement or those in government who combat domestic terrorism,鈥 said Mark Potok, senior fellow at the 蜜桃传媒 and editor of the Intelligence Report. 鈥淭he standoff at the Bundy ranch in Nevada was a highly coordinated, military-style operation by far-right extremists that could have easily ended in a bloodbath.鈥

A shooting spree committed by antigovernment extremists that left three people dead in Las Vegas 鈥 including two police officers 鈥 is one of the attacks examined in 鈥淲ar in the West,鈥 the account of the Nevada standoff. Witnesses say the couple who committed the murders, Jerad and Amanda Miller, shouted, 鈥淭his is a revolution!鈥 during the June 8 rampage.聽

The Millers had spent time at Cliven Bundy鈥檚 ranch in April, when the U.S. Bureau of Land Management backed off on its attempt to round up Bundy鈥檚 cattle to satisfy more than $1 million in grazing fees he has refused to pay.

鈥淢iller鈥檚 Crossing鈥 explores the shooting rampage that left three people dead at Jewish facilities in Overland Park, Kansas, in April. The suspect, Frazier Glenn Miller, spent 40 years in the white supremacist movement and was a prominent Klan leader in the 1980s. His long history on the radical right is detailed as well as the attack, which ended with Miller being whisked away in a police car as he shouted, 鈥淗eil Hilter.聽

鈥淲ar on Women鈥 investigates the rampage that left six people dead and 13 injured in Isla Vista, Calif., on May 23. The killer, Elliot Rodger, hated women and spent time perusing woman-bashing websites, known collectively as the 鈥渕anosphere.鈥 While Rodger was mentally ill and developed his obsessions with women over many years, it appears the manosphere reinforced his mindset, helping to justify his hatred.

鈥淭hese killing sprees show that hateful rhetoric and propaganda don鈥檛 just disappear into a vacuum, but can fuel deadly rage,鈥 Potok said.

Also in this issue of the Intelligence Report:

  • 鈥淜u Klux Kan鈥檛鈥 explores how a recent spate of leafleting by two Klan groups has sparked reports that the organization is resurgent. The numbers suggest otherwise, but that鈥檚 not to say there are no dangers.
  • 鈥淭roublesome Sources鈥 critiques a new book on race and evolution by noted science writer Nicholas Wade that seems to support many of the key claims made by academic racists.
  • 鈥淎fter the Killing鈥 features longtime racist skinhead David Pillatos, who is serving 30 years for murder. Pillatos says he鈥檚 a changed man and recently even named a foundation after his victim.
  • 鈥淔rom Canada, With Love鈥 examines how a Canadian court recently struck down a $220,000 bequest by a citizen of that country to the National Alliance, an important neo-Nazi group based in West Virginia.