March 11, 2011  |   
                                               
                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                              This week, as conservative media hyped the commencement of Rep. Peter King's contentious hearings on Muslim radicalization in America, details continued to emerge about Kevin William Hardham, the 36-year-old Army field artillery veteran accused of planting a "weapon of mass destruction," along the route of a Martin Luther King Day unity parade route in Spokane, Washington earlier this year.
The backpack bomb Hardham allegedly planted   contained shrapnel dipped in rat poison. It was discovered just  minutes  before hundreds of MLK Day marchers arrived. Hardham appears to  have a  long track record of fantasizing about politically and racially   motivated violence in various online extremist forums.
The attempted MLK Day bombing in Spokane was hardly an isolated   incident. Right-wing domestic terrorist plots and extremist violence are   on the rise in America. Earlier this year the Muslim Public Affairs   Council (MPAC) released a report analyzing domestic terrorism statistics   reported by the FBI and other crime agencies since the 9/11 terrorist   attacks. The MPAC report shows that since 9/11, right-wing extremists   including neo-Nazis and other white supremacists have been involved in   63 domestic terror plots, while radical Muslims have been involved in   45.
Meanwhile, the number of hate groups tracked by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) topped 1,000 this year  for  the first time since the SPLC began counting such groups in the  mid  1980s, and the resurgent antigovernment militia movement is  exploding,  with more than 300 new groups forming in the last year  alone.
SPLC Intelligence Project director Mark Potok attributes this dramatic increase in right-wing extremist activity to three factors:   "Resentment over the changing racial demographics of the country,   frustration over the government's handling of the economy, and the   mainstreaming of conspiracy theories and other demonizing propaganda   aimed at various minorities."
 
  
Below is a list of some of the right-wing extremist terror plots and violence from recent years.
  
July 27, 2008
Unemployed truck driver Jim David Adkisson opens fire   on the congregation of a Unitarian Church in Knoxville, Tennessee,   killing two people and seriously wounding six. Adkisson tells police he   targeted the congregation because its members included gay men and   mixed-race couples. A suicide note that Adkisson left in his car outside   the church describes the attack as a "hate crime," "a political   protest," and "a symbolic killing."
"I'd like to encourage other like-minded people to do what I've done," Adkisson wrote. "If life ain't worth living anymore don't just kill yourself. Do something for your country. Go kill liberals."
Adkisson pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and was sentenced to life in prison.
October 22, 2008
Two  white power skinheads are arrested for allegedly plotting a  multi-state  robbery and murder spree that would have culminated in an  attempt to  assassinate then-Democratic presidential nominee Barack  Obama.
Daniel Cowart, 20, and Paul Schlesselman, 18,   were later charged with conspiracy, possessing a sawed-off shotgun and   threatening to kill and inflict bodily harm upon a major presidential   candidate. Both pleaded guilty and were sentenced to 14 years and 10  years, respectively.
The  skinheads told police they formulated their plot in Bells,  Arkansas,  after shooting out the windows of a black church. According  to a written  statement they provided to investigators, the skinheads  planned to rob  gun stores and kill 88 non-whites, beheading 14 of their  victims.
Those numbers are significant in the white supremacist movement. Eighty-eight stands for "Heil Hitler," as H is the eighth letter of the alphabet. The number 14 refers to the number of words   in the white supremacist catchphrase coined by domestic terrorist  David  Lane: "We must secure the existence of our people and a future  for  white children."
"The  final thing we had discussed was dressing in white tuxs [tuxedos]  with a  top hat and trying to assassinate Obama. We did not plan on  living past  that day," Cowart wrote in his statement. "One day, while  riding in my  car, Paul told me that he wanted to go to a predominately   [predominantly] black school and kill as many as he could."
A  Secret Service agent testified at Cowart's sentencing hearing that in   dozens of chat messages found on his computer he discussed wanting to   kill African-Americans and start a race war.
December 9, 2008
Law enforcement investigators   find radioactive materials and other components for making a "dirty   bomb" in the home of Belfast, Maine neo-Nazi James Cummings after   Cummings is shot to death by his wife, who told police she killed her   husband after years of physical and mental abuse.
According  to an FBI field intelligence report from the Washington  Regional Threat  and Analysis Center, investigators found containers of  uranium,  thorium, lithium metal, thermite, aluminum powder, beryllium,  boron,  black iron oxide and magnesium ribbon, along with neo-Nazi  materials,  including a completed application to join the National  Socialist  Movement, a major neo-Nazi group.
A  local painter who worked inside the Cummings residence earlier in  2008  told police that Cummings expressed admiration for Adolf Hitler  and  showed off the swastika flag hanging in the house.
Amber  Cummings reportedly told police that her husband was "very upset"  over  the election of President Obama, was in contact with white  supremacist  groups, and had been mixing chemicals in their kitchen  sink.
January 21, 2009
Brockton, Massachussets neo-Nazi Keith Luke   is arrested after shooting three immigrants from Cape Verde, killing   two of them. Luke tells police that he is "fighting for a dying race,"   and that the shootings were just the first stage of his plan for a   killing spree.  A police report states that he had planned to go to an   Orthodox synagogue  to "kill as many Jews as possible during bingo  night." Luke is being  held without bail, awaiting trial for murder,  attempted murder, armed  kidnapping, and gun charges.
January 22, 2009
Police in Mobile, Alabama discover a "cache of explosives" in the home of white power skinhead Thomas Hayward Lewis   during a search conducted after Lewis was arrested for spray-painting   swastikas and neo-Nazi slogans on a Messianic Jewish place of worship.   The graffiti included "Hitler was right," "Juden raus (German for "Jews   get out)," and references to Combat 18, a violent neofascist group  based  in the United Kingdom that promotes "lone wolf" terrorism. Lewis   pleaded guilty to damaging religious property and illegal possession of   an explosives device. He was sentenced earlier this year to one year  in  prison.
April 4, 2009
Richard Poplawski, a 23-year-old neo-Nazi   with an Iron Eagle tattooed on his chest, murders three police  officers  in Pittsburgh. The Iron Eagle was a symbol of the Nazi Party  under  Hitler.  According to police, Poplawski, wearing a bulletproof  vest and armed  with an AK-47, ambushed three officers responding to a  domestic  disturbance call. Friends and relatives said Poplawski, who  posted  frequently to the white supremacist website Stormfront, was  convinced  that Jews controlled the media and that President Obama was  going to  seize his arsenal of firearms.
"The  federal government, mainstream media, and banking system in these   United States are strongly under the influence of- if not completely   controlled by- Zionist interests," Poplawski wrote on Stormfront. "An   economic collapse of the financial system is inevitable, bringing with   it some degree of civil unrest if not outright balkanization of the   continental US, civil/revolutionary/racial war, etc. Let comfort and   convenience be damned, and I will welcome the hardship and embrace the   pain secure in the knowledge that our people will rise above and   overcome our darkest days."
Poplawski is scheduled to stand trial next month.
May 23, 2009
Anti-government militiaman Joshua Cartwright kills two sheriff's deputies   in Okaloosa County, Florida, after they attempt to arrest him on   domestic violence charges at a local gun club. After killing the two   deputies, Cartwright fled the scene. His vehicle crashed and flipped   during a high-speed chase. When Cartwright began firing out the rear   window of his wrecked truck, sheriff's deputes returned fire, killing   him. According to a police report, Cartwright's wife said he ""believed   that the US Government was conspiring against him. She said he had been   severely disturbed that Barack Obama had been elected President."
May 30, 2009
Shawna Forde,   the leader of Minuteman American Defense, a nativist border vigilante   group, leads the home invasion robbery of a man that Forde and her two   accomplices, MAD Operations Director Jason Bush and MAD member Albert   Gaxiola, believe to be a drug trafficker. 
During  the robbery, Arivaca, Arizona resident Raul Flores is shot to  death in  cold blood along with his nine-year-old daughter, Brisenia.  Flores' wife  is also shot but survived by playing dead.
Forde's  half-brother, Merill Metzger, later tells the Arizona Daily  Star that  shortly before the murders Forde started talking about  forming an  "underground militia" that would be funded by robbing drug  dealers. "She  was talking about starting a revolution against the  United States  government," he said.
Bush  has longstanding ties to the neo-Nazi group Aryan Nations, and  told  police that he and Forde discussed recruiting Aryan Nations  members for  their militia.
Forde was convicted of orchestrating the premeditated murders and sentenced to death last month.
 May 31, 2009
Scott Roeder   guns down George Tiller as the Wichita, Kansas doctor serves as an   usher  at his church. Tiller was the director of Women's Health Care  Services, a  clinic that performed abortions among providing other  health  services.
Roeder had a long history of involvement with right wing extremist groups,   including the Christian anti-government group the Freeman militia as   well as the anti-abortion group Army of God, which advocates the use of   violence as an anti-abortion tactic.  Previously, Roeder had planned to   bomb an abortion clinic.
Scott Roeder was convicted of first degree murder on January 29th, 2010. He received a life sentence.
 June 10, 2009
Longtime white supremacist James von Brunn   opens fire with a rifle just inside the entrance to the U.S. Holocaust   Memorial Museum, killing a security guard. Prior to the Holocaust  museum  shooting, von Brunn was best known for attempting to takeover  the  Federal Reserve building in 1981 armed with a sawed-off shotgun.  Brunn,  who died in jail last year while awaiting trial, was friends  with the  late white supremacist leader Ben Klassen, who founded the  virulently  racist Church of the Creator. Brunn referred to Klassen as  an "Aryan  genius."
 March 28 to March 30, 2010
Nine members of the Hutaree Militia,   a "Christian Patriot" group, are arrested in Michigan, Ohio and   Indiana. According to a federal indictment, the militia members engaged   in paramilitary training in perpetration for an apocalyptic battle with   the forces of the Antichrist, who they believed would include local,   state and federal law enforcement officers. The indictment charged the   militia members with plotting to kill a randomly selected police officer   in Michigan, and then detonate improvised explosive devices at the   officer's funeral. Searches of Hutaree Militia residences turned up   weapons, explosives, a Hitler tract and an audio version of The Turner   Diaries, the race war novel written by William Pierce, founder of the   neo-Nazi group National Alliance, that Oklahoma City bomber Timothy   McVeigh cited as inspiration.
A federal judge has set the trial date for September 13th.
 May 20, 2010
Two police officers in West Memphis, Ark. are shot to death after pulling over a minivan driven by self-declared "Sovereign Citizen"   Jerry Kane, with his son in the passenger seat. (Sovereign Citizen   adherents deny the legitimacy of the federal government and subscribe to   a bizarre alchemy of conspiracy theories popular among right-wing   extremists. Notorious advocates of sovereign citizens ideology include   Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols and the now defunct Montana Freemen, a violent militia outfit.)
 As  the officers puzzled over a stack of handmade identification  documents  Jerry Kane provided, 16-year-old Joseph Kane burst from the  minivan  firing an AK-47. Both officers were killed. Jerry and Joseph  Kane died  about 90 minutes later during a gun battle in a Wal-Mart  parking lot in  which two other officers were wounded.
A  subsequent investigation revealed the father-and-son team had been   traveling the country, delivering seminars on Sovereign Citizen   ideology. "I don't want to have to kill anybody," Jerry Kane said at   seminar not long before the West Memphis shootings. "But if they keep   messing with me that's what it's going to have to come down to."
July 18, 2010
According to a police investigation,   Byron Williams opened fire on California Highway Patrol officers who   had stopped him on an Oakland freeway for driving erratically. For 12   frantic minutes, Williams traded shots with the police, employing three   firearms and a small arsenal of ammunition, including armor-piercing   rounds fired from a .308-caliber rifle. In an affidavit,   an Oakland police investigator reported that during an interview at  the  hospital, Williams "stated that his intention was to start a  revolution  by traveling to San Francisco and killing people of  importance at the  Tides Foundation and the ACLU."
 March 9, 2011
Kevin William Harpham is charged  with  attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and receiving and   possessing an improvised explosive device in relation to the attempted   bombing of an Martin Luther King Day parade. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center,   Harpham was previously a member of the National Alliance, an infamous   neo-Nazi organization although it's unclear whether he's still a   card-carrying member.
An  individual identifying himself Kevin Harpham made several posting on   the anti-Semitic website Vanguard News Network, including a March 2008   post to a VNN discussion titled, "Violent Revolution Against ZOG."  [ZOG  stands for "Zionist Occupied Government.]
"Niggers  will provide the chaos that consumes the state and federal  resources to  the point that it can't police all of it. Hopefully by  then there will  be more of us and we will be able to take some form of  action to gain  control of the pockets we will have been pushed back  into," Harpham  wrote. "Just make sure you clean that pocket up real  good. Arrest a few  every day starting with the former police, political  leaders and pastors  and then bury them during the night."
                                                            
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