SPLC's Intelligence Report | Page 44

West Virginia headquarters under police escort, and then gave the SPLC extensive details of the group’s shady practices. Then, by December, the always combative Williams was in similar fights with two other staffers — Garland DeCoursy and Michael Oljaca — who had moved to the compound following Dilloway’s departure. After Williams allegedly assaulted DeCoursy in Oljaca’s presence, both obtained restraining orders against him. But Williams was arrested twice in one week for violating those orders and was asked to stay out of the state until a court hearing. The local prosecutor said Williams was under investigation for other possible crimes, including battery and larceny. The year also brought what seems to be the final demise of another neoNazi group, the Aryans Nations, which has been in trouble since a successful SPLC lawsuit in 2000 and the death of ‘Nativist Extremist’ Groups Dwindling Away The number of “nativist extremist” groups — organizations that go beyond mere advocacy to personally confront suspected undocumented immigrants or those who hire or help them — dropped again last year, fal ling from 19 to just 17. But that slight decline was not a reflection of diminishing hatred directed at immigrants to the United States. What appears to have happened is that figures in the political mainstream, along with numerous state legislatures, have essentially coopted the issue, making the nativist extremist groups’ activism unnecessary. A recent example of that is Donald Trump’s call for a ban on Muslim immigration and his description of Mexican immigrants as rapists and drug dealers. Immigrantbashing, whether of Latinos or Muslims, has gone mainstream. The drop last year was the latest since the movement peaked in 2010 with 319 groups. The numbers fell off quickly at first, at a time when state legislatures were passing harsh nativist laws, but have been very low for three years now. What follows is a list of nativist extremist groups active in 2015: ARIZONA (2) MINNESOTA (1) American Freedom Riders Phoenix, AZ Arizona Border Recon Phoenix, AZ Minnesotans Seeking Immigration Reform Hanska, MN CALIFORNIA (2) Minuteman Project Laguna Hills, CA We the People Rising Claremont, CA FLORIDA (1) Floridians for Immigration Enforcement, Inc. Pompano Beach, FL GEORGIA (1) Dustin Inman Society, The Marietta, GA IOWA (1) NEW JERSEY (2) New Jersey Citizens for Immigration Control Carlstadt, NJ United Patriots of America Linden, NJ NORTH CAROLINA (1) North Carolinians for Immigration Reform and Enforcement (NCFIRE) Wade, NC OREGON (1) Oregonians for Immigration Reform McMinnville, OR RHODE ISLAND (1) Minuteman Civil Defense Corps Des Moines, IA Rhode Islanders for Immigration Law Enforcement Central Falls, RI MARYLAND (1) TEXAS (2) Help Save Maryland Rockville, MD Stop the Magnet Houston, TX Texas Border Volunteers Waxahachie, TX MICHIGAN (1) Michiganders for Immigration Control and Enforcement Frankenmuth, MI 42 splc intelligence report its founder in 2004 (see story, p. 22). Already, the group’s once infamous compound outside Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, had been sold, its building burned and its members split into squabbling factions. In November, the group’s last self-proclaimed leader, Morris Gullet, shut down his organization, which he had based in Converse, La. Shortly before that, another former leader, August Kreis III, was sentenced to 50 years in prison on three counts of sexually abusing a child. WHITE NATIONALIST GROUPS White nationalists — racists who generally eschew Klan or neo-Nazi uniforms and propaganda in favor of a more genteel, suit-and-tie approach — saw two major figureheads of their movement die in 2015: Gordon Baum, founder of the Council of Conservative Citizens (CCC), and Willis Carto, who was involved in a series of racist organizations and publishers and a leader in denying the Holocaust. Baum died in March, three months before his organization would become infamous for the online postings about black crime that Dylann Roof said radicalized him and ultimately led to the June Charleston massacre. Both the CCC’s Kyle Rogers, the webmaster who made those postings, and CCC President Earl Holt were dragged through the media for their roles as propagandists. For a brief time, the press was bad enough that the CCC asked Jared Taylor, a far more articulate white nationalist than either of them, to act as its spokesman during a press barrage. Carto, whose racist and anti-Semitic activism stretched back to the 1950s, died in October. He was the founder of an array of organizations and publications: the anti-Semitic Liberty Lobby, the Holocaust-denying Institute for Historical Review, Noontide Press, Youth for Wallace and The Spotlight, American Free Press and The Barnes Review. Although he at one time had friends in Congress and other centers of power, he was reviled by most politicians by the time he died. ▲ Contributors to this report included Heidi Beirich, Keegan Hankes, Stephen Piggott, and Evelyn Schlatter.