Posts Tagged ‘Florida’

Jackson: Black Voters Deserve a Return on Election ‘Investment

Wednesday, November 14th, 2012

The Rev. Jesse Jackson on Saturday said that President Obama’s reelection was “a great victory,” but that it would be incomplete with a reconstruction of urban America and an investment in the communities where the blacks who voted overwhelmingly for the president live.

Despite attempts at voter suppression in states such as Ohio, Pennsylvania and Florida, Jackson said, blacks turned out en masse to vote, enduring waits that stretched into hours in many places.

“We voted early, we voted long. Our votes won,” he said.

 

“What do we want? We want, we want, we want, we deserve, we deserve … a return on our investment.

“What’s good for us is good for everybody. What’s good for blacks is good for everybody,” he said. “We bled too much, we died too young, we cried too much, we prayed too long, now we want a return on our investment.”

Referring to those voter suppression efforts, he said, “these acts of meanness had unintended consequences.” Rather than keeping blacks and Latinos away from the polls, voter ID measures and the curtailing of access to the voting booths made people more determined to vote. “Suppression became stimulation and people fought back,” he said.

 

Jackson said blacks, who voted for Barack Obama for state senator, for U.S. Senator, and now twice as President of the United States, should demand, bargain, and march if necessary, for an end to “patterns of race discrimination, (for) our share of jobs.

Saying that automobile companies and banks got bailouts, “we’re the people who provided the votes — we want to be bailed out. We need jobs, education, healthcare now. If we can be targeted for voter registration and voter turnout, target us for reconstruction, now.

“We are the new mainstream,” Jackson said. “We are the America of shared hopes and shared dreams. We have the power, we have the votes.

“It’s time to march again. March for healthcare, march for jobs. When we march great things come our way. “

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Legal battle over illegal immigrant’s assets still unresolved

Saturday, August 11th, 2012

The legal battle over Hugo Diaz’s assets continues to grow seven months after the Evans contractor pleaded guilty to harboring illegal immigrants.

In one corner is the U.S. Attorney’s Office, which charged Diaz and his wife, Blanca Diaz, in November with conspiring to hire undocumented workers for financial advantage over other homebuilders in the area.

On the other side are the building supply businesses seeking to collect at least $180,000 in debts after Diaz’s businesses were forced into bankruptcy.

At stake is $42,500 in three frozen bank accounts, two homes worth a combined $2.3 million and nine vehicles valued at more than $82,000, court records show.

As of May, Diaz was owed a combined $600,000 from 24 companies, through his company, Miranda Contractors Inc.

The federal government claims in criminal court that the property is the product of Diaz’s illegal activity and therefore subject to seizure under forfeiture law. The competing claim comes from bankruptcy court, where six parties, including one claim on behalf of the couple’s children, say they are entitled to a share.

“The question arises: Who has the rights to the property? Is it the Chapter 7 Trustee or the United States under a forfeiture provision of the U.S. law?” attorney Louis Saul wrote in Feb. 16 letter to U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Susan Barrett.

Saul’s question resonates across the U.S. In south Florida, the property, yachts, cars and bank accounts of Scott Rothstein were seized by the U.S. government after he pleaded guilty in 2010 to running a $1.4 billion Ponzi scheme. At the same time, more than 350 creditors made $469 million in claims against Rothstein’s law firm. The competing claims produced mixed results.

“The multiple pieces of Rothstein litigation certainly led to some winners, yet one cannot help but wonder whether the wins would have been greater and the losses smaller had the government and trustee been able to avoid such costly, lengthy, and bitter litigation,” attorney Kathy Bazoian Phelps wrote in an analysis for the American Bar Association.

The growing clash between bankruptcy and federal forfeiture is trickling down from high-profile Ponzi cases, such as Rothstein and Bernie Madoff, to smaller cases like Diaz, said bankruptcy attorney Henry Kevane.

“The government has recently started using its forfeiture rights in all manner of cases,” Kevane said.

Kevane found several facets of Diaz interesting, particularly because it’s focused on immigration crimes. In many crimes forfeiture is used to pay restitution to the victims, but it’s unclear what the purpose of forfeiture is in this case, Kevane said.

The proceeds “are not going to the persons they illegally harbored in the states,” Kevane said. Often these cases boil down to who has the moral high ground, “but there really isn’t a moral difference between the victim of a crime and an unpaid creditor.”

In the Diaz case, the size of the debts varies. In court documents, Augusta Ready Mix Inc. states it delivered concrete to Hugo Diaz and Miranda Contractors Inc. in September and October and received a check for $22,587 in return. That check was returned by the bank five days later because the bank account had been seized by the federal government. After applying various credits, the company says it’s still owed $20,122.

Adding to the confusion are the corporations set up by Diaz. In court papers, attorney Saul alleges that Diaz persuaded Southern Wholesale Supply Co. to extend him credit in the amount of $87,641. Diaz, who entered the country illegally in 2000, asserted that he would pay the bills through his business Miranda Contractors Inc., which carried a federal identity number.

“The corporations of Mr. Diaz were subterfuges and he was, in fact, the owner of these entities for the purposes of doing business illegally in the United States,” Saul writes.

Fourteen charges, including money laundering, were dropped against Hugo Diaz when he pleaded guilty to one count of harboring an illegal immigrant. He was sentenced to 15 months in federal prison and recommended for deportation. His wife was sentenced to time served and immediately released to immigration officials for deportation.

Similar problems over Diaz’s assets are evolving in Aiken County, where he was building six houses on Metz Drive in North Augusta’s Green Acres neighborhood, near the intersection of Atomic and Martintown roads. Maner Builders Supply Co. filed a mechanic’s lien Nov. 15 against Miranda Contractors for nonpayment of materials delivered to the site from July through October. That debt amounts to $31,651. The lien names a separate entity, Metz Street LLC, for breach of contract.

On July 30, the United States filed a motion to dismiss all of these claims.

“… While claims by these creditors against Diaz’s estate may be proper in bankruptcy court, the six petitions filed in this Court must be dismissed because the petitioners lack standing to claim any of the forfeited assets,” the motion reads.

Using case law to build its argument, federal attorneys classify the claimants as unsecured creditors with no legal right to the forfeited assets. There are currently no hearings scheduled on the case in either criminal or bankruptcy court.

Saul, the bankruptcy attorney, makes his position clear in the February letter to Judge Barrett.

“There are sufficient monies to pay all creditors of Mr. Diaz through the U.S. Bankruptcy Court and there would be sufficient monies to pay at least a million dollars to the United States as forfeiture. However, the government does not want it to work that way.”

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Florida candidate changes name to web address

Sunday, June 3rd, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Florida is letting a congressional candidate put the name of his web address on the ballot.

Why? Because Eddie Gonzalez went before a Miami-Dade judge this past January and had his name legally changed to “VoteforEddie.com.”

A spokesman for the Florida Department of State said Wednesday that officials have no choice because a judge granted the name change request just days after election officials told him he could not use any nicknames.

“As a ministerial office, we have no authority to not permit his legal name to appear on the ballot,” said the spokesman, Chris Cate.

VoteforEddie.com, who lists a Hialeah address, is an independent candidate running for a seat in the 25th Congressional District, which includes parts of Broward, Collier and Miami-Dade counties. He is challenging five-term U.S. Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Miami.

When reached by phone, the independent candidate said he took the unusual step of changing his name as an effort to draw attention to his bid because he will not receive any help from political parties.

“Since I’m not under the wings or good graces of both political parties, I had to find a different way to get my message out there,” he said.

Campaign finance reports filed with the Federal Election Commission show Diaz-Balart had raised about $608,400 as of March 31, compared to about $2,400 for Eddie for Congress.

He also said he wanted to make sure that Diaz-Balart had an opponent during this year’s general election. Diaz-Balart was re-elected without opposition in 2010.

A spokesman for Diaz-Balart’s campaign declined to comment Wednesday on Gonzalez changing his name to VoteforEddie.com.

Besides running for Congress, the candidate says on his website that he was born in 1980 to Cuban immigrants, attends college and is working on a business degree. He says he represents “the working class” and that he’s running as an independent because people are upset with both parties for gridlock in Washington D.C. Under the “About Me” section of his website, though, he’s still identified as Eddie Gonzalez.

His website includes a video where he talks about the need to end the nation’s dependence on foreign oil and concludes: “I am VoteforEddie.com and I approve this message.”

Election records show that VoteforEddie.com has already gathered enough petition signatures to qualify for the ballot. State officials will finalize this year’s ballot next week.

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Charges filed against alleged members of white supremacist group

Saturday, June 2nd, 2012

Thirteen people were arrested in May. The men and women are accused of being members of American Front, a group accused of domestic terrorism. They are also accused of plotting attacks in the hope of fomenting a race war, and engaging in paramilitary training at a compound in Osceola county.

The Ninth Judicial Circuit State Attorney’s Office announced the charges Friday.

Marcus Faella, the accused ringleader, was charged with four counts: directing the activities of a gang, paramilitary traing — teaching, conspiracy to shoot at, within, or into a building, and paramilitary training — participation.

Christopher Brooks, Dustin Perry, Dylan Rettenmaier, Mark McGowan Jr., Paul Jackson, Patricia Faella, Diane Stevens, John Wyczlinski were all charged with conspiracy to shoot at, within, or into a building.

Brooks, Perry, Rettenmaier, Kent McLellan, Mark McGowan Jr., Richard Stockdale, Patricia Faella, Stevens, Jennifer McGowan and Wyczlinski were charged with paramilitary training — patricipation.

Prosecutors also say a 14th person has been charged, but that person’s name was sealed.

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The Rise of Black-on-White Violence

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

The media and the usual race-mongers made sure that all of America knew about George Zimmerman’s killing of Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida, on February 26. The local police initially did not arrest Zimmerman because it was an obvious case of self-defense.

There was no such outcry, however, when a month later on March 26 a 50-year-old white man was attacked and beaten with a hammer by two black teens, in Midway, Florida, just six miles from Sanford. The Orlando Sentinel published a description of the attackers, but neglected to mention their race. One of them had just finished a seventeen month prison sentence.

On May 9, the Star-Ledger of Newark, NJ published an article, “Group of 10 or 15 ‘thugs’ rob and beat 5 people following Prudential Center concert, cops say.” There was no reference to their race in the article and when I emailed the reporter for clarification, I received no response.

This kind of double standard is rampant in the reporting of black-on-white attacks and Colin Flaherty, a radio host on WDEL, Wilmington, Delaware, and a writer who has won more than forty awards for his work, has recently published “White Girl Bleed a Lot: The Return of Race Riots to America” that chronicles a trend that is receiving little media attention and one which local police authorities tend to avoid discussing.

The book is not a racist screed. It is the reporting of events.

It is also an appalling record of violence against whites that must be addressed or political correctness will doom any chance of dealing with it. In the introduction to his book, Flaherty writes, “Almost as astonishing as the widespread racial violence is the willingness of people in authority to deny it. Ignore it. Explain it away. Even condone and lie about it.”

The book is a chronicle of black-on-white violence in recent years. “In Chicago,” Flaherty notes, “after weeks of racial violence where the newspapers refused to mention the crime was almost exclusively black gangs on individual whites, the Superintendent of Police said he knew what was causing the violence: Sarah Palin.”

“A member of Congress from Chicago, Bobby Rush, said black violence in Chicago was routine and the only reason anyone was paying any attention to the race riots in downtown Chicago was because it was black on white violence.”

“The riots on the streets of South Philly had ‘no racial component’ and were ‘nothing much’ said the Mayor, until events forced him to acknowledge the obvious: black people were taking racial violence to a new level.”

Flaherty says “The deniers fall somewhere in between two points; (on) one hand, they say the racial violence is not happening. On the other, they say it is, but everyone already knows it—and it is happening for a good reason. Sometimes they say both.”

“As I started to unravel the threads of these attacks,” writes Flaherty, “it became clear right away that this was happening all over the country for at least a year or two. And that newspapers were underreporting it—when they reported it at all.”

As the Memorial Day weekend approaches at the end of the month, Flaherty warns about Black Beach Week in Miami Beach and Black Bike Week in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, along with Speed Week in Charlotte, North Carolina.

For the past decade the events in Florida “have become the center of the universe of the world’s biggest black beach party. The city doesn’t really host the party. People just show up.” The events are distinguished by “Shootings, assaults on police, mountains of trash, (and) violence against people and property on a scale that can only be called anarchistic.”

These are not isolated events. The pattern was repeated in Indianapolis, Indiana, during its annual Black Expo and in Charlotte, North Carolina, in the several day party that precedes the annual Coca Cola 600, a NASCAR event. In 2011, an estimated 30,000 to 60,000 blacks rioted, resulting in one of the city’s largest mass arrests. Charlotte will be the site of the 2012 Democratic National Convention.

In July 2010, in Milwaukee, some ten to twenty white youths were enjoying a Fourth of July fireworks show when they were set upon by a gang of blacks. In Minneapolis in 2011, more than 800 black people “marauded through downtown followed a few days later by an incident when twenty black women beat a white woman after she confronted them about harassing her child.

In city after city throughout America—Akron, Rochester, Atlantic City, Atlanta, St. Louis, Boston, Seattle, Las Vegas, Detroit, Denver, and even the nation’s capital, Washington, D.C., Flaherty documents riots and attacks that can no longer be ignored or seen as isolated events.

It is just too easy to pass this off as “black anger.” It is racism, and the Zimmerman-Martin killing is just the tip of the iceberg. Despite decades since the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964 that was passed to redress the wrongs of the past against black Americans, some blacks retain a malignant hatred directed against whites.

“The Return of Race Riots to America” portends that the summer of 2012 could reflect this trend. It is a warning to the leaders in both the black and white communities to condemn it and to the nation’s media to do something other than ignore or exploit it.

The reality is that we are going to be hearing a lot more from Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, and Louis Farrakhan who thrive on such violence, and the real tragedy is that millions of law-abiding black citizens will be branded by such behavior.

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Accused white supremacist re-arrested after bond mistake

Saturday, May 12th, 2012

One of the suspects arrested in an investigation of a Central Florida white supremacist organization was re-arrested and released on Friday because of a bond issue.

According to Osceola County deputies, at approximately 4:45 p.m., Patricia Faella turned herself into the Osceola County Jail. Earlier Friday afternoon, an arrest warrant was issued for her re-arrest after her original bail was supposed to be $500,000 for one count, $1,000 for another and $250 for a third count.

According to Karen Levey, director of due process services for the Orange County circuit court, when warrants were signed for all of the suspects, Circuit Judge Walter Komanski set bonds from $50,000 to $500,000. Within 24 hours if an inmate doesn’t bond out, they have a first appearance with a judge and that judge can change the bond.

Instead, Faella was released on a $5,000 bond. She is accused of being one of the local directors of the American Front organization, along with her husband, Marcus, who was also arrested and released on $50,000 bond, which was the original amount.

In the new arrest warrant, the court says it made a mistake in releasing Faella on a lower bond amount, citing “confusion amongst the court and the assistant state attorney concerning the actual charges involved and what degree felonies.”

Judge Theotis Bronson wasn’t informed that Faella was part of this group and didn’t know the circumstances surrounding her arrest, Levey said.

The new arrest warrant also says the court didn’t set the arrest warrants for any of the other co-defendants and had “no intention of lowering this defendant’s bond amount.”

Other judges handled the other initial appearances and chose to keep the bonds the same, Levey said. According to Levey, when Judge Bronson realized it, he revoked the bond and signed a warrant for her arrest on Thursday.

Also arrested were Mark McGowan; McGowan’s wife, Jennifer McGowan, 25; Diane Stevens, 28; Kent McLellan, 22 and Paul Jackson, 25, for their involvement in the AF, according to court documents. Most are still in jail on bonds $500,000 and above, while the Faellas have since been released.

A total of 11 have been charged of hate crimes, criminal conspiracy and teaching paramilitary training (showing another person to make or use a firearm), according to affidavits.

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Who Are We?—The “Dissident Right”?

Saturday, May 12th, 2012

So this is the other side of the Right, eh? Not bad; though of course nothing like as classy as the hushed, oak-paneled,Chambers-of-Commerce-financed precincts of Conservatism Inc.,whose entrance is now barred against me by an angel with a flaming sword. The furnishings are a bit cheesy in fact, if you look too closely, which of course you shouldn’t. Do those drapes really match that carpet?

Nice people, though—most of whom, truth be told, I’ve known for a decade or more. And after watching Conservatism Inc. for a quarter of a century running along behind History’s great rumbling juggernaut squealing ”Would you mind slowing down just a teeny bit, please?” there is always the faint hope that this other crowd might actually turn us back some way towards liberty, sovereignty, science, constitutionalism.

But who are they—I mean, we? What do we call ourselves?

For a special-interest website like VDARE.com this is not really a problem: ”Immigration Patriot” is sufficiently accurate.

VDARE.com occupies a corner of the non-Conservatism Inc. spectrum, though, and publishes commentary from other corners thereof, and it would be nice to have a definitive name for the whole shebang—something a little less defined-by-exclusion than “non-Conservatism Inc.”

Alternative Right” has been snaffled by Richard Spencer, all good luck to him. “Paleoconservative” has come to have a whiff of incense and cassocks about it, at least to me. I have tried to float“Oppositional Right,” but it’s a bit of a mouthful.

The enemies of conservatism are eager to supply their own nomenclature. “White Supremacist” seems to be their current favorite. It is meant maliciously, of course, to bring up images of fire-hoses, attack dogs, pick handles, and segregated lunch counters—to imply that conservatives, especially non-mainstream conservatives, are cruel people with dark thoughts.

Leaving aside the intended malice, I actually think “White Supremacist” is not bad semantically. White supremacy, in the sense of a society in which key decisions are made by white Europeans, is one of the better arrangements History has come up with. There have of course been some blots on the record, but I don’t see how it can be denied that net-net, white Europeans have made a better job of running fair and stable societies than has any other group.

Even non-whites acknowledge this in unguarded moments: this Zimbabwean blogger, for example, or the American high school student in this exchange with his teacher:

One day I asked the bored, black faces staring back at me: “What would happen if all the white people in America disappeared tomorrow?”

“We screwed,” a young, pitch-black boy screamed back. The rest of the blacks laughed.[ A White Teacher Speaks Out,American Renaissance, July 2009]

Non-white supremacy is after all the rule over much of the world, from entire continental spaces like sub-Saharan Africa to individualblack-run or mestizo-run municipalities in the U.S.A. I see no great floods into these places by refugees desperate to escape the horrors of white supremacy.

We should not let our enemies dictate vocabulary to us, though. In any case, the Whatever Right contains many separatists—who, far from wanting to lord it over nonwhites, just want to get away from them.

No, “White Supremacist” really won’t do, even in an owning-the-insult spirit.

“White Nationalist,” which has a fairly healthy currency here on the Whadda-We-Call-Ourselves Right, strikes me as even more problematical. What is the nation to which “nationalist” is the referent? “White” isn’t a nation, nor likely to become one.

I am of course aware of the much chewed-over distinction between nationalism and patriotism, first aired I think by Orwell, then taken up by Russell Kirk, the bloke who is supposed to have said—and you can register a skeptical background harrumph from me here—that “I am deeply patriotic, but I don’t have a nationalist bone in my body.”

I don’t mind the word “white” in either of those expressions. Conservatism, Inc. or otherwise, is a white people’s movement, a scattering of outliers notwithstanding.

Always has been, always will be. I have attended at least a hundred conservative gatherings, conferences, cruises, and jamborees: let me tell you, there ain’t too many raisins in that bun. I was in and out of the National Review offices for twelve years, and the only black person I saw there, other than when Herman Cain came calling, was Alex, the guy who runs the mail room. (Hey, Alex!)

This isn’t because conservatism is hostile to blacks and mestizos. Very much the contrary, especially in the case of Conservatism Inc. They fawn over the occasional nonwhite with a puppyish deference that fairly fogs the air with embarrassment. (Q: What do you call the one black guy at a gathering of 1,000 Republicans?  A: “Mr. Chairman.”)

It’s just that conservative ideals like self-sufficiency and minimal dependence on government have no appeal to underperforming minorities—groups who, in the statistical generality, are short of the attributes that make for group success in a modern commercial nation.

Of what use would it be to them to embrace such ideals? They would end up even more decisively pooled at the bottom of society than they are currently.

A much better strategy for them is to ally with as many disaffected white and Asian subgroups as they can (homosexuals, feminists, dead-end labor unions), attain electoral majorities, and institute big redistributionist governments to give them make-work jobs and transfer wealth to them from successful groups.

Which is what, very rationally and sensibly, they do.

So it’s not the “white” that bothers me. Heck, conservatives might just as well be honest about it, since it’s so almighty bleeding obvious.

It’s that “supremacy” and “nationalism” are poor fits for the spectrum of views out here on the To-Be-Determined Right.

(Whether “white” will become a poor fit too once I get the Arctic Alliance going, I shall discuss another time.)

What else have we got?

American Renaissance’s Jared Taylor, who has himself used “White Nationalism” in the past, seems to have settled on “race realist.” Again, though, Jared is working his own particular furrow. I’m all forrace realism—it sure beats race denialism—and it’s a key concept underpinning the Who-The-Heck-Are-We Right. But it’s just one concept sharing space with others (the aforementioned liberty, sovereignty, science, constitutionalism) and I don’t think should be privileged.

So what do we call ourselves? I’m going to make a pitch for “Dissident Right.”

The word “dissident” has its roots in Latin dis-, meaning “apart,” and sedere, “to sit.” Dissidents sit apart from the main crowd, don’t join in the community singing, and refuse to applaud the Emperor’s new clothes.

Dissidence is a very honorable estate, made so by the brave dissidents of the great totalitarian empires. Here is the gold standard:

[Wang Ruowang] was jailed by all the major Chinese despots of that era: by Chiang Kai-shek in the 1930s, by Mao Tse-tung in the 1950s, and again in the 1960s, and then by Deng Xiaoping after the student movement of 1989, which Wang—then aged 71—vigorously supported … Wang enjoyed the distinction of having been expelled from the Party twice …

The sensational courage and integrity of those dissidents from totalitarianism in fact gives me pause. There might, I mean, be something a bit impertinent in comparing our occasional inconveniences with the horrors that they, and often their families and friends, faced up to.

There is also the air of loserdom that hangs over dissidence: what I once described in a column as “the futility of dissidents.”

All right; I was obviously on a downer at the time. I’ve put in hundreds of hours with Soviet and Chinese dissidents, though, and they really are a shabby and depressing lot. (I’ll except Wang Bingzhang, who was always smartly turned out.)

Still and all, we need a name. And I suggest that “Dissident Right” is as good as any.

For a fallback position—considering the pusillanimity and careerism of Conservatism Inc., its eagerness to fall into line with any leftist doctrine that does not involve higher taxation or being beastly to embryos—how about just…

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NM white supremacist prison gang membership rising

Friday, May 11th, 2012

Officials say that New Mexico‘s prisons are seeing a rise in white supremacist gang memberships as some white inmates seek protection against largely Hispanic gangs.

State officials say membership in white supremacist gangs has nearly doubled in state prisons over the last 10 years, and state officials worry the numbers may continue to rise.

Dwayne Santistevan, administrator of the state’s Security Threat Intelligence Unit, says white supremacist gangs are involved in a number of criminal activities and often battle with Latino gangs.

Santistevan says white supremacist gangs like the Aryan Brotherhood and the Nazi Low Riders are affiliated with gangs in other states.

He says at least two Hispanic inmates are members of white supremacist gangs.

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White supremacists arrested on ‘race war’ charges in Florida

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

Law enforcement officials in central Florida have been rounding up members of a white supremacist group who were allegedly training with weapons at a rural Osceola County compound. The training was reportedly in preparation for a coming “race war.”

The group was also planning a “disturbance” at Orlando City Hall to recruit new members, according to court documents.

The arrests of the 10 alleged members of the neo-Nazi skinhead group American Front, or AF, came after a confidential informant infiltrated its Osceola County chapter and shared information about the group’s plans with state investigators.

The arrests serve as one of numerous reminders of the efforts of law enforcement to monitor, and sometimes crack down on, the militia and hate groups whose numbers have ticked up since the election of President Obama.

In Alaska on Monday, a 12-member jury was selected in the trial of three militia members who are accused of planning to kill judges and police, according to the Anchorage Daily News. In Georgia on Tuesday, two militia members who had allegedly planned to attack government workers and buildings attended a pretrial hearing after two of their alleged conspirators agreed to cooperate with federal prosecutors, according to the Associated Press.

Seven of the arrests in Florida occurred over the weekend, with three more suspects arrested Monday, according to court documents and a statement from the office of Lawson Lamar, the state attorney based in Orlando.

Each of the seven, including the apparent ringleader, Marcus Faella, 41, faces state felony charges of attempting to shoot into an occupied dwelling, evidence of prejudice while committing a crime, and violation of a state “paramilitary training” statute. That statute makes it a crime to teach people to use deadly weapons or techniques with the knowledge that they will be “unlawfully employed for use in, or furtherance of a civil disorder in the United States.”

An affidavit in support of the arrests said that Faella “has been planning and preparing the AF for what he believes to be an inevitable race war,” adding that when the war comes, he would “kill Jews, immigrants and other minorities.”

Mark Potok of the Montgomery, Ala.-based Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks extremist groups, said the details of the arrest comport with a broader sense of anger and fear among far-right groups. Those feelings seem to have been exacerbated by Obama’s election in 2008.

Since then, the number of “patriot”-style militia groups has shot up from 149 to 1,274 nationwide. Many of these groups do not espouse hatred toward minorities, but are concerned about the expansion of federal government power, especially under a Democratic president.

The number of groups that overtly express hatred toward minorities seems to have grown as well, albeit more slowly. The reaction, Potok says, likely isn’t just to Obama, but to the broader demographic changes he represents.

“They are realizing they can’t win the demographic battle anymore,” Potok said, “that this country can’t return to the white-dominated country it’s been.”

Potok said the American Front group probably has fewer than 100 members, though its chapters are as far-flung as Sacramento and New Jersey. The affidavit alleges that members of chapters from around the country traveled to Faella’s Osceola County compound to train with weapons and prepare for what he assumed would be an inevitable racial conflagration.

The affidavit also alleges that Faella had been trying to make ricin, a deadly derivative of the castor bean plant that’s classified as a weapon of mass destruction.

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Eight alleged white supremacists arrested on hate crime charges in Florida

Tuesday, May 8th, 2012

Eight members of an alleged white supremacist group in Florida were arrested on hate crime charges, the Orlando Sentinel reported Monday.

All eight are members of a local chapter of the American Front, which the Florida State Attorney’s Office labeled a “domestic terrorist organization” that espouses anti-Semitic and white supremacist views.

Among those charged are the group’s St. Cloud, Fla., chapter’s directors — Marcus Faella, his wife, Patricia Faella and Mark McGowan.

The Faellas were arrested Friday and have since been released after posting $1 million bond, the Sentinel reported.

Charges against the group include attempting to shoot into an occupied dwelling, evidence of prejudices while committing offense, and paramilitary training, according to WOFL-TV.

Under Florida law, the crime of paramilitary training is providing instruction to another person on how to use or make a firearm or destructive device with the knowledge or intention that it will be “unlawfully employed for use in, or in furtherance of, a civil disorder within the United States.”

It was unclear what specifically incited the arrests.

Authorities are currently searching for several additional suspected American Front members, the Sentinel reported.

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