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[Right Wing Violence In America] Rightist Killers - 25 Years of Right-Wing Terrorism in the United States

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Right Wing Terrorism In America

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Oct 28, 2018, 10:01:33 PM10/28/18
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Rightist Killers - 25 Years of Right-Wing Terrorism in the United States


https://www.adl.org/sites/default/files/documents/CR_5154_25YRS%
20RightWing%20Terrorism_V5.pdf

James Harris Jackson, traveled to New York City with the alleged intention
of launching a series of violent attacks on black men to discourage white
women from having relationships with black men. After several days, Jackson
chose his first victim, a 66-year old black homeless man, Timothy Caughman.
Jackson later allegedly admitted that he had stabbed Caughman with a small
sword he had brought with him, describing the murder as a “practice run.”

Right Wing Terror Incident 1993-2017 by Movement

However, after the killing, Jackson’s angry energy dissipated and he turned
himself over to the authorities. A week later, New York prosecutors
announced that they were charging him with second-degree murder as a hate
crime and also with a state charge of terrorism.
Jackson’s aborted killing spree was a shocking example of right-wing terror
in the United States but it was unfortunately far from an isolated example.

For over a century and a half, since “burning Kansas” of the 1850s and the
Ku Klux Klan of the 1860s, right-wing terrorism has been an unwelcome
feature of the American landscape. Yet today, many people are barely aware
that it exists and most people don’t recognize its frequency or scope.

Far more attention in recent years has been given to the threat of
homegrown radical Islamic terror—a danger that has generated such horrific
acts as the Orlando and San Bernardino shooting sprees. Yet the very real
specter of radical Islamic terror in the United States has existed
alongside an equally serious threat of terror from right-wing extremist
groups and individuals.

Both movements have generated shooting sprees, bombings, and a wide variety
of plots and conspiracies. Both pose threats so significant that to ignore
either would be to invite tragedy.

To illustrate the threat of right-wing terrorism in the United States, the
Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism has compiled a list of 150
right-wing terrorist acts, attempted acts, plots and conspiracies from the
past 25 years (1993-2017). These include terrorist incidents from a wide
variety of white supremacists, from neo-Nazis to Klansmen to racist
skinheads, as well as incidents connected to anti-government extremists
such as militia groups, sovereign citizens and tax protesters. The list
also includes incidents of anti-abortion terror as well as from other,
smaller right-wing extremist movements.

ADL’s Center on Extremism defines terrorism as a pre-planned act or
attempted act of significant violence by one or more non-state actors in
order to further an ideological, social or religious cause, or to harm
perceived opponents of such causes. Significant violent acts can include
bombings or use of other weapons of mass destruction, assassinations and
targeted killings, shooting sprees, arsons and firebombings, kidnappings
and hostage situations and, in some cases, armed robberies. Domestic
terrorism consists of acts or attempted acts of terrorism in which the
perpetrators are citizens or permanent residents of the country in which
the act takes place.

The right-wing terrorist incidents in ADL’s list include those that best
fit the above criteria. They are drawn from the much larger pool of
violent and criminal acts that American right-wing extremists engage in
every year, from hate crimes to deadly encounters with law enforcement.
Right-wing extremists annually murder a number of Americans, but only some
of those murders occur in connection with terrorist acts. There are, after
all, hundreds of thousands of adherents of right-wing extremist movements
in the United States and all such movements have some degree of association
with criminal activity. No one should think, therefore, that the incidents
listed here represent the breadth of right-wing violence in the U.S. But,
as acts of terrorism, they do show right-wing movements at their most
vicious and ambitious.

The Perpetrators

The people who committed or attempted the terrorist acts listed here came
from a variety of right-wing extremist movements. In a few cases,
extremists connected to terror incidents here even adhered to more than one
right-wing extremist movement; in such cases, the seemingly dominant
ideology was selected for statistical purposes. Oklahoma City bomber
Timothy McVeigh, for example, was primarily an anti-government extremist
but also had white supremacist leanings. Richard Poplawski, who gunned
down three police officers in Pittsburgh, was a white supremacist who also
had leanings towards the anti-government movement.

Most right-wing extremists in the United States fall into one of two broad
umbrella movements or spheres: white supremacists and anti-government
extremists. An overwhelming majority of the terror incidents listed here
(85%) were committed by adherents of one of these two spheres. Moreover,
the number of acts attributed to each sphere is almost identical: 64
terror incidents are related to white supremacists, while 63 are related to
anti-government extremists. Many people, when picturing right-wing
terrorism, tend to think of white supremacists, but anti-government
extremists such as militia groups and sovereign citizens pose just as much
of a threat.

White supremacists involved in right-wing terror incidents include
adherents of every major segment of the white supremacist movement,
including neo-Nazis, racist skinheads, “traditional” white supremacists
(such as Ku Klux Klan groups), white supremacist prison gangs, the
religious sect Christian Identity, and the Alt Right. Leaving aside dual-
movement extremists such as Timothy McVeigh, the worst white supremacist
terrorist was Dylann Roof, a “traditional” white supremacist who embarked
upon a deadly shooting spree at the Emanuel AME church in Charleston, South
Carolina, in 2015, killing nine.

The anti-government extremists, who are often collectively termed the
“Patriot” movement, consist primarily of adherents of the tax protest
movement, the sovereign citizen movement, and the militia movement (with
the latter including Oath Keepers and Three Percenters). Though the
“Patriot” movement goes back to the mid-1960s, it was in the mid-1990s that
it really came into its own in terms of becoming a major domestic terrorist
threat, one that equaled the threat posed by white supremacists. Oklahoma
City bombers Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols were dedicated adherents of
the “Patriot” movement and their 1995 attack on the Murrah Federal Building
gave notice that anti-government extremists now posed a major threat.

It is common for the media and others to assume that anti-government
extremists are also mostly white supremacists, but this is not the case.
Though there is some overlap between the two spheres, the main anti-
government extremist movements direct their anger at the government and
there have always been people of color in these movements.
Indeed, the sovereign citizen movement in particular has unfortunately seen
particularly strong growth within the African-American community in recent
years. Two of the sovereign-citizen related incidents on this list, the
LaPlace, Louisiana, shootings in 2012 and the Columbus, Ohio, bomb-making
attempt in 2016, involved African-Americans. Two incidents not included on
this list involved extremists who were primarily black nationalists but who
had secondary sovereign citizen affiliations: the 2014 plot by two men to
blow up the Gateway Arch and kill law enforcement officials in St. Louis,
Missouri, and the 2016 deadly ambush killings of three police officers in
Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

The militia movement has spent much of its history trying to distance
itself from accusations of racism or white supremacy but in recent years
much of the movement has willingly embraced a particular type of bigotry:
anti-Muslim hatred. This Islamophobia has taken numerous forms, from armed
protests in front of mosques to a major terrorist plot in October 2016 in
Garden City, Kansas, where three militia members were arrested in
connection with an alleged plot to blow up an apartment complex that
primarily housed Muslim Somali-American residents. The militia movement
could produce more such terror attempts aimed at Muslims in the future.
Anti-abortion extremists are responsible for 11% of the terror incidents
collected here. Compared to the incidents connected to white supremacists
or anti-government extremists, the number of abortion related terror
attacks and attempts is low. However, given the small number of anti-
abortion extremists relative to adherents of the other, much larger
movements, the consistent stream of terror incidents that flow from this
movement is worrisome.

Anti-abortion extremists are an example of what is called “single-issue
extremism.” Single-issue extremists are typically the extreme wing of a
broader, more mainstream movement dedicated to a single cause or issue.
While most people in those movements would not think of committing acts of
violence, adherents of the extreme wing of those movements are more likely
to consider violent activity, operating under a sense of extreme urgency
and with a conviction that the ends justify the means. A few other right-
wing single issue extremists, such as anti-Muslim extremists and anti-
immigration extremists, have also committed violent acts included among the
150 listed here.

All of the perpetrators and alleged perpetrators listed in this report have
ties to extremist ideologies, but not all of them actually have had
connections to specific extremist groups. Indeed, “terrorist groups” as
such—i.e., groups that form and exist largely for the purpose of committing
terrorist acts—are rare in the United States, where the rule of law is
strong and such groups have great difficulties in finding purchase. Even
when extremists are connected to specific groups, they rarely commit their
actions at the direction of the group. Rather, extremist groups in the
United States tend to serve a purpose of radicalization more than anything
else, whether of their own members or, as in the case of Dylann Roof, of
non-members who may be influenced by their propaganda.

The perpetrators of some of the incidents on this list were part of formal
groups, while others were essentially involved in “cells”—informal
associations of extremists banding together to commit an act. But just as
common as these two types were lone offenders—the “lone wolf” terrorists
responsible for a large number of America’s terror incidents. Indeed,
approximately half of the 150 incidents listed in this report involved lone
wolf offenders. Today, thanks to the Internet, it is easier than ever for
someone to become steeped in extremist ideologies, even to the point of
being willing to commit acts of great violence, without ever being involved
in an organized extremist group.

The Incidents

The list in this report includes 150 incidents involving acts, attempted
acts, and plots of right-wing terrorism from 1993 through part of 2017. A
few of these terror acts are well-known, such as the bombings conducted by
Timothy McVeigh and Eric Rudolph, while many other incidents garnered
little more than local media coverage and are unknown to most Americans.
Such lists always involve some value judgments on the margins and there are
some incidents on the list that some people might think don’t belong on
such a list, while there are items missing from the list that some people
might think should be included, such as the armed standoffs involving
members of the Bundy family and others in Nevada in 2014 and Oregon in
2016.

In many cases where a possible incident was not included, it was for one of
several reasons. First, for some reported incidents, an extremist
connection has never been satisfactorily established or has in fact been
disproved. For example, in 2014 Dennis Marx attempted to use firearms and
explosives to attack an Atlanta courthouse; some media outlets reported or
speculated that Marx was a sovereign citizen. However, no evidence
confirming this ever emerged and the police eventually acknowledged he had
not been involved in the movement. Similarly, some media speculated that
Jared Lee Loughner, who shot Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and 18 others
in a 2011 shooting spree in Arizona, was a sovereign citizen, but this also
turned out to be untrue.

An additional group of incidents did not make the list because, while an
extremist definitely committed an act of significant violence, the act was
a spontaneous act of violence without noticeable premeditation; such acts
are usually not included here. Finally, some incidents—usually discoveries
of extremists with major illegal arsenals of weapons and/or explosives—were
not included because there was insufficient evidence of any target or
intent to use the weapons for an act of terrorism. The incidents in these
two categories are serious criminal violations but not really incidents of
terrorism.

Those omissions still leave 150 terror incidents from the last quarter-
century. This lengthy string of dangerous attacks and plots illustrates
how deeply seated the threat of right-wing terrorism is in the United
States.

Right-wing Terror Incidents in the United Stats, 1993-2016

A look at these 150 incidents over time reveals that two specific surges of
right-wing terrorism have occurred over the past 25 years. The first was
the surge of the mid-to-late 1990s, a result of a great increase in right-
wing extremism as a result of a variety of factors that include the
election of Bill Clinton, the passage of NAFTA, the passage of gun control
measures such as the Brady Law and the Assault Weapons Ban, and the deadly
standoffs at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, in 1992 and Waco, Texas, in 1993, which
energized white supremacists and anti-government extremists, respectively.
The 1990s surge had died down by the turn of the century and right-wing
terrorism occurred less frequently in the early-to-mid 2000s. Events
ranging from the non-event of a Y2K-related disaster to the replacement of
Bill Clinton with George W. Bush to the 9/11 terror attacks all played a
role in dampening right-wing furor.

Unfortunately, this state of affairs did not last. Near the end of Bush’s
second term, right-wing terror incidents began to increase again and this
trend accelerated by 2009, thanks in part to the election of Barack Obama,
whom both white supremacists and anti-government extremists hated, and to
the major economic disasters of the Great Recession and the foreclosure
crisis. The latter two in particular allowed the sovereign citizen
movement to greatly expand. The result was a second surge of right-wing
extremism, one that was accompanied by a surge of right-wing terror
incidents. This increased level of terror-related activity remains high
today, though whether or not it will sustain itself during a Trump
administration remains to be seen.

The worst right-wing terror attack, the Oklahoma City bombing, killed 168
people and injured hundreds more. Thankfully, none of the other incidents
achieved anywhere near that level of lethality and destructiveness. In
large part, this has been due to effective law enforcement, at both the
federal and state/local levels, who have uncovered and prevented many
attempts at terrorist acts. Indeed, only a minority of the incidents
recorded here—65 out of 150--could be considered “successful” acts, by
which is meant that the terrorist(s) succeeded in carrying out part or all
of their plan or were able to wreak some sort of damage (such as shooting
someone) while attempting to carry out their plan. This does not include
bombs that were successfully planted but which failed to go off.
Some of the attempted acts never had a good chance of success, while others
could easily have been deadly. Even though most terror incidents were not
successes, the minority that did succeed resulted in 255 deaths and
approximately 603 people injured (not all injury counts are consistent).
Were it not for the efforts of law enforcement to detect and prevent right-
wing acts of terror, that deadly toll would be far higher still.

Right-wing Terror Incidents 1993-2017 Weapons of Choice


To accomplish their deadly aims, extremists used a variety of tools and
tactics, but overwhelmingly firearms and explosives were the most common
weapons chosen. Indeed, 55 of the 150 terror incidents involved use or
planned use of firearms, while another 55 involved explosives. Moreover,
of the 17 incidents involving multiple weapons types, firearms and
explosives were by far the most common combination.

It is worth nothing that, although bombs were used or considered by
extremists just as often as firearms, their successful use rate was much
lower. This is largely due to the fact that explosives are far more
difficult to obtain and to use in the United States than are firearms,
which are abundant, easy to use, and very deadly. There is far better
regulation of explosives than firearms in the United States.
In a minority of cases, right-wing extremists attempted arsons or
incendiary devices such as Molotov cocktails; abortion clinics were a
frequent target of such violence. And, from time to time, extremists would
select more exotic means of murder, such as using the deadly toxin ricin or
poisoning a water supply or trying to build a radiological weapon.

Target(s) of Right-wing Terror Incidents 1993-2017


Whatever weapon they planned to use against their targets, right-wing
extremists have had no shortage of targets. Indeed, some ambitious plots
have contained an entire array of targets slated for death and destruction.

Of the various targets of right-wing anger, it is governmental and law
enforcement institutions that are most often threatened. Of the incidents
examined here, 66 involved some sort of government-related target. This is
largely due to the fact that white supremacists and anti-government
extremists alike, as well as most of the lesser right-wing movements, hate
government and law enforcement. This category includes federal, state and
local branches of government and law enforcement.

White supremacists are responsible for most of the racial and religious
targeting. Virtually any person or institution associated with a non-white
race can be a potential target for white supremacists, but African-
Americans, Hispanics, and multi-racial couples/families have been the most
common groups victimized. The most frequent religious targets were, not
surprisingly, Jews and Muslims (including non-Muslims perceived as
Muslims). Actual or perceived immigrants, as well as LGBT targets, were
also subject to victimization.

Abortion-related targets, typically clinics that provide abortion services
as well as the people who work at such places, were also common. While
anti-abortion extremists were the extremists most likely to attack
abortion-related targets, other right-wing extremists, most noticeably
white supremacists, also occasionally attempted such attacks.
Right-wing extremist have also taken aim at a variety of other targets.
Commercial targets have included various businesses and, in particular,
financial institutions. Infrastructure targets include a wide range of
installations, from refineries to dams to water supplies. In some cases,
extremists have simply targeted crowded public areas, hoping to cause
significant human casualties.

The Present and Future of Right-Wing Terrorism

Over the past 25 years, right-wing terrorism has exhibited a considerable
amount of stability. Part of this is due to the fact that most of it comes
from two mature and well-established movements: the white supremacist
movement and the anti-government “Patriot” movement. They have specific
goals and specific enemies and can be expected to produce a steady stream
of extremists willing to use violence to achieve those goals or harm those
enemies. Moreover, though fringe movements, they nevertheless have deep
roots in American society and cannot simply be rooted out or eliminated.
Right-wing terrorism is not going away anytime soon.

be with newer types of extremist movements, which enables it to utilize
informants and undercover officers to a much fuller extent than might
otherwise be the case. It is no coincidence that a number of the prevented
acts recounted in this study were prevented thanks to “sting” operations,
which are one of the most consistently successful law enforcement tools
against terrorism—as long as law enforcement is sufficiently familiar with
the relevant movement(s).
Most of the 25 years examined here for right-wing terrorism have occurred
in what can be deemed the “Internet era.” However, the Internet of the
mid-1990s was very different than that of ten years later or today’s on-
line world. Overall, right-wing terrorism has remained pretty consistent
throughout this era, but the evolution of the Internet has resulted in some
changes.

In particular, the social networking revolution that occurred during the
period 2006-2009 has made it easier for extremist ideas and tactics to
spread very far, very fast. This can allow new extremist movements, such
as the white supremacist Alt Right, to quickly gain purchase, and can allow
established movement, such as the sovereign citizen movement, to rapidly
resurge. Social networking has also allowed extremists to meet each other
and even to plot on-line. The October 2008 school attack plot in Tennessee
and the Georgia militia plot of February 2014 are two examples where
extremists who met on-line later joined up in the “real world” to plot
terrorist acts.

The Internet may also have made lone wolf terrorism—terrorism committed by
a lone perpetrator not acting at the behest of any organized group—a more
common phenomenon, because one can now self-radicalize using on-line
resources with little need to engage with other extremists in the “real
world.” The shooting sprees of Keith Luke in 2009 and Dylann Roof in 2015
are examples of terrorist acts committed by lone extremists who radicalized
on-line with little or no real interaction with other extremists. Lone
wolves have long existed within America’s radical right, but could be even
more likely in the future.

Finally, for the past quarter of a century, right-wing terrorism has been a
consistent feature in the landscape of American violence, but it has
garnered far less notice than some other forms of terrorism, most notably
Islamic terrorism. Though a few incidents, such as the Oklahoma City
bombing, or the bombings of Eric Rudoph, received extensive media coverage,
many of the incidents collected here received scant media attention,
particularly from major national media sources.
One reason for this under-coverage may be very simple: a surprising number
of the terrorist acts and plots listed here originated away from major
media centers. While some incidents took place in locations such as New
York City, Chicago, or Los Angeles, many others occurred in out-of-the-way
places such as Garden City, Kansas; Fairbanks, Alaska; or Lenoir,
Tennessee. As a result, such incidents are less likely to get national
media attention and, if they get any, less likely to get sustained
coverage.

Whatever the reasons for the lack of coverage, one of its consequences has
been an inadequate awareness among policy-makers and the public alike of
the threat posed by violent right-wing extremists. Today, the United States
still does not even have a federal domestic terrorism statute. Federal
spending on training law enforcement on issues such as right-wing violence
and terrorism is extremely low.
One thing is certain: if the United States does not treat right-wing
terrorism as a real threat and react appropriately, there is no chance of
lessening the danger posed by violent right-wing extremists and the 150
terror incidents described in this report will be joined by still more.
EXTREMISM, TERRORISM & BIGOTRY

Right Wing Terrorism In America

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Oct 30, 2018, 6:28:54 PM10/30/18
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