US The white-nationalist Patriot Front is getting bigger, and more visible, in New England

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The white-nationalist Patriot Front is getting bigger, and more visible, in New England​

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Long before its members marched — masked, uniformed, and 100-or-so deep — through downtown Boston early this month,Patriot Front had been quietly making its presence felt in New England.

Stickers bearing the right-wing group’s slogans such as ”Better Dead Than Red” and “One Nation Against Invasion” had been popping up in towns across the region in recent years. At Framingham State University, such propaganda prompted offers of a $5,000 reward and eventual criminal charges against two of the group’s local leaders on charges of vandalism and conspiracy.

Internal videos released this year by a nonprofit media groupshowed Patriot Front members in action — boxing in the woods in Sutton, spray-painting graffiti in Quincy, draping their banner from a Storrow Drive overpass in Boston, slapping on stickers in Providence’s Waterplace Park.

Despite New England’s reputation as a deeply blue region, those who’ve studied Patriot Front say that its local faction is among the group’s most active nationally, along with Virginia and Texas, where several of its leaders are based. The group, rooted in a notorious far-right rally in Virginia in 2017, is finding a receptive audience for its white supremacist ideology among certain young men — and has targeted colleges for recruitment.

In fact, there have been hundreds of incidents involving Patriot Front members in Massachusetts and Rhode Island this year alone, according to statistics compiled by the Anti-Defamation League. In addition, at least nine Patriot Front members or associates from across the region have faced charges stemming from their work for the group.

“These extremists perceive New England to have favorable racial demographics, which supposedly presents more opportunities to find like-minded people,” said Jeff Tischauser, a senior research analyst with the Southern Poverty Law Center, in an e-mail. “Extremists around the U.S. also take inspiration from New England history before, during, and immediately after the American Revolution.”

The July 2 march in Boston, which caught law enforcement and much of the public by surprise, represented something of a coming out party for the organization in New England, drawing members from all over the country to the city’s streets on a bustling holiday weekend. The noisy march of young white men banging drums and hoisting Patriot Front flags along the city’s storied Freedom Trail made national headlines and drew a sharp rebuke from Mayor Michelle Wu.
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But Thomas Rousseau, the group’s national leader, was delighted, declaring on an Internet livestream show a few days later that the Boston event reached an audience of “thousands and thousands.”

“There were very few people in that city that did not hear about Patriot Front that day,” Rousseau said during the two-hour show. “The chants were just bouncing off all the walls of the big skyscrapers. It was an amazing demonstration. Really cut and clean. Perfectly done.”

The core number of Patriot Front members is relatively small — estimates range from around 150 to 200 nationally, with 15 to 20 across New England — and their tactics can sometimes seem amateurish. But that, experts say, should not distract from the group’s virulent ideology and its potential for violence.

Rhode Island native and Patriot Front member Kyle Morelli, 28, wrote in a group chat that was obtained and publicly released by the media organization Unicorn Riot last November that he had little patience for anyone in the group who lacked his devotion to the cause.
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“People come here because we are disciplined and serious,” wrote Morelli, whose comments include antisemitic rhetoric as well as remarks disparaging Pope Francis. “It isn’t a big deal to set proper expectations, I was forward, we are fascists.”

In June, police in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, arrested 31 Patriot Front members suspected of planning to riot at a Pride celebration, including Rousseau and another Texas leader, Graham Whitson, who handles video production for the group. Both men also participated in the Boston march, according to the ADL.

In Boston, Patriot Front members carrying large metal shields surrounded a Black man near Back Bay Station. The man, Charles Murrell, said he was assaulted and reported the confrontation to police.

While Boston police investigate, public pressure is mounting for federal intervention. Last week, 17 civil rights organizationssent a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland asking the Department of Justice to investigate Patriot Front’s activities in Coeur d’Alene and Boston.
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“It’s clear that the group is promoting a hateful and bigoted agenda while also actively promoting violence,” Lindsay Schubiner of the civil rights group the Western States Center said in a statement accompanying the letter to Garland.

Patriot Front was born in the aftermath of the violent 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va., where hundreds of torch-carrying white men chanted, “Jews will not replace us” and counterdemonstrator Heather Heyer was run down and killed.

Rousseau, then a member of the neo-Nazi group Vanguard America, led marchers during the rally, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, and was also photographed with James Alex Fields Jr., the man convicted of first-degree murder in Heyer’s death. But disputes among Vanguard America’s leadership ultimately led Rousseau to start Patriot Front, said the SPLC, and today, its members crisscross the country carrying Patriot Front’s white supremacist message.

From the beginning, experts say, Patriot Front was intended, to portray a more “moderate” image compared to other white nationalist organizations. The group’s organizing materials stress that members should dress “politically neutral” and, in contrast to similar groups, they avoid carrying overt symbols of hate, such as Confederate flags and Nazi swastikas.

But a massive trove of Patriot Front videos and documents released earlier this year by Unicorn Riot, a media collective that investigates the far right, leaves little doubt what the organization is about.

Patriot Front members perceive Black people, Jewish people, and LGBTQ people as enemies and worry that the United States is becoming an increasingly hostile place for white people thanks to immigration and higher birthrates for people of color, according to experts who study the group as well as members’ own private correspondence.

“Our nation’s families [are being] ripped apart,” one member from Washington wrote last year in a leaked discussion. “Bloodlines ended. Our people backed into a corner.”
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The group has built a reputation as a highly organized, disciplined organization that expects much from its members, including out-of-state travel to events, where they march in formation. In public, members typically wear matching shirts, pants, and military-style boots, sometimes carrying shields as though girding for battle.

Their meetings are meticulously planned, sometimes down to 10-minute intervals, and members are encouraged to give up vices, from cigarettes to pornography. Secrecy, too, is woven deeply into the group’s ethos. Members use code names online and face-coverings during public demonstrations — and are paranoid about outsider infiltration, with detailed policies for meeting potential new members.

At times, the group’s activities can seem like little more than play-acting — a far cry from the intimidating presence members seek to present publicly.

Members’ weight loss totals are meticulously tracked via spreadsheet (“Lost 3 lbs fat, gained muscle,” reported one member from Texas in the leaked documents). Group chats include detailed discussions of the latest online fantasy video games.

When members in the Pacific Northwest were planning a Thanksgiving meet-up last year, according to leaked internal chats from Unicorn Riot, a member in Idaho said his attendance was dependent on “how our new kitten’s health looks in the coming weeks.”
Still, to write the group off as computer geeks or wannabe soldiers would be a mistake, say experts who have tracked the group’s behavior in recent years.

“You look at the stuff, and it’s a bunch of [guys] who are working out, and they’re sharing information about who’s losing weight,” said Robert Trestan, ADL New England’s Regional Director. “But these are also people who come together, train, plan to do something, show up, are responsible for a Black man (in Boston) being assaulted, [and] disseminating hate into dozens of communities.

“We should not underestimate the danger that they pose.”

Despite the group’s public disavowals of violence, several of its members and associates have disturbing histories.

A 19-year-old Illinois man with reported ties to the group was arrested in 2018 after he was discovered to be in possession of five guns without a license. Another man identified by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a Patriot Front member — Joffre James Cross III — pleaded guilty in 2020 to federal gun charges in Houston after authorities found several homemade or self-assembled guns, known commonly as “ghost guns,” in his home. Cross is still in prison.

Several others New England members or associates have also racked up criminal charges.
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Last month, 28-year-old Alex C. Beilman of Meriden, Conn. — identified in court records as the group’s New England leader — pleaded not guilty to criminal charges related to Patriot Front stickers that were found last December on the campus of Framingham State University.

Beilman owns a condo in Meriden, where he registered to vote as a Democrat in 2016 and then switched to the Republican Party in 2019, according to city records.

Police also identified and charged Brian D. Harwood, 24, a former Brewster resident now living in Spencer, as a leader in the group’s New England faction. Court records show Harwood has successfully defended himself against vandalism charges related to his Patriot Front activities in two cases on Cape Cod. He pleaded not guilty in the Framingham case.
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Both men are licensed to carry firearms, according to police reports, and internal videos published in January by Unicorn Riot show Beilman and Harwood boxing with other Patriot Front members during outdoor gatherings in Wellesley, Hopedale, and Sutton.

Police also allege Beilman and Harwood directed a third man, Matthew Smaller, 24, of Maynard, to deface the grounds of Framingham State with Patriot Front stickers. The incident resulted in the school offering a $5,000 reward for information. Smaller has pleaded not guilty also.

In online chats, Harwood, using his code name Henry MA, urged members to target colleges and universities, which he regards as fertile ground for recruitment.

“Everyone should pick a campus close to them and [stencil Patriot Front slogans] weekly no matter what. The youth is our greatest potential,” he wrote last November, according to a report by Framingham State University police.
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Beilman, Harwood, and Smaller didn’t return messages from the Globe. Attorney Francis Doran Jr., who is representing the men in the Framingham case, declined to make his clients available for interviews.

“Everyone deserves a defense,” he said.

Last year, police officers at the MBTA station in Salem, Mass., charged that Morelli — a former middle school honor student in Coventry, R.I. — defaced public property. Though he refused to answer officers’ questions, his hooded sweat shirt and the images stenciled in red and white paint on the wall gave him away: “Strong Families Make Strong Nations — Patriot Front” and “Defend American Labor — Patriot Front.”

Morelli’s lawyer, Christopher B. Coughlin of Boston, did not respond to a request for comment. Beilman is also facing charges in the Salem case.

It’s the group’s big-picture plans, however, that experts say should raise alarms.

“The goal of Patriot Front and its members is to create a white ethnostate, which is an inherently violent proposition,” said Tischauser, of the SPLC.

The group’s documents and physical training programs suggest its members are preparing for the possibility of physical altercation. In addition to the sparring videos, the group’s documents include instructions for fashioning a splint, a walking ankle cast, and a forearm and wrist cast.

And Patriot Front leaders do not appear deterred by negative publicity. In fact, blowback from the group’s recent high-profile actions in Boston and Idaho seems to have energized them.

In his comments following this month’s Boston march, Rousseau suggested that the backlash has served as a catalyst to reinforcing the organization’s efforts.

“One of the most wonderful things to see is that outside pressure only causes the ranks to close,” he said during the appearance online.

“It only makes us stronger.”
 
In Boston, Patriot Front members carrying large metal shields surrounded a Black man near Back Bay Station. The man, Charles Murrell, said he was assaulted and reported the confrontation to police.
Update:

Boston man files lawsuit seeking to bankrupt white supremacist group he says assaulted him
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Mark Pratt
2023-08-08 17:31:58GMT

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FILE - Charles Murrell fends off a marcher from a group bearing insignias of the white supremacist group Patriot Front on July 2, 2022, in Boston. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, file)
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FILE - Members group bearing insignias of the white supremacist Patriot Front shove Charles Murrell with metal shields during a march through Boston on Saturday, July 2, 2022, in Boston. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)

BOSTON (AP) — A Black teacher and musician who says members of a white nationalist hate group punched, kicked and beat him with metal shields during a march through Boston last year sued the organization on Tuesday.

Charles Murrell III, of Boston, was in the area of the Boston Public Library to play his saxophone on July 2, 2022, when he was surrounded by members of the Patriot Front and assaulted in a “coordinated, brutal, and racially motivated attack,” according to the lawsuit filed in federal court in Boston.

No one has been charged in connection with the attack on Murrell, 36, and the investigation remains open, according to a spokesperson for the Suffolk district attorney’s office.

Murrell was taken by ambulance to the hospital for treatment of lacerations, some of which required stitches, the suit says.

“As a result of this beating, Mr. Murrell sustained physical injuries to his face, head, and hand, all of which required medical attention. Mr. Murrell also continues to suffer significant emotional distress to this day as a result of the incident,” the suit says. “Among other harms, those physical and emotional injuries have adversely affected Mr. Murrell’s ability to earn a living as a musician.”

He has “been plagued by severe anxiety, mental anguish, invasive thoughts, and emotional distress, including, but not limited to, persistent concern for his physical safety and loss of sleep,” and “routinely has nightmares and flashbacks,” according to the suit.

The defendants are Patriot Front, its founder Thomas Rousseau and multiple John Does.

Attorney Jason Lee Van Dyke, who has represented Patriot Front members in prior cases, is still trying to determine whether he is eligible to represent the group in this case, but said Tuesday “Charles Murrell is not telling the truth.”

“I happen to have seen the raw video footage and it was clear that Charles Murrell was the aggressor and no one with Patriot Front did anything unlawful.” he said. “His assertion that he was beaten is factually incorrect.”

Murrell, who has a background teaching special education, said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press on Monday that the lawsuit is about holding Patriot Front accountable, helping his own healing process and preventing anything similar from happening to children of color, like those he teaches.

“Because I am a teacher, because I come from special education, I am filing this suit so that even if one of them has a safer sidewalk to walk on, the work that I am doing will have been very much worth it,” Murrell said.

The march in Boston by about 100 members of the Texas-based Patriot Front was one of its so-called flash demonstrations that it holds around the country. In addition to shields, the group carried a banner that said “Reclaim America” as they marched along the Freedom Trail and past some of the city’s most famous landmarks.

They were largely dressed alike in khaki pants, dark shirts, hats, sunglasses and face coverings.

Murrell said he had never heard of the group before the confrontation, but believes he was targeted because of the tone of their voices and the slurs they used when he encountered them.

Patriot Front trains members to commit acts of violence, according to the suit.

“What happened to Mr. Murrell was no accident,” the suit says. “For years, Patriot Front ... has publicly and privately advocated for the use of violence against those who disagree with its express goal of creating an entirely ‘white’ United States.”

The goal of the lawsuit is not just justice and accountability, said Licha Nyiendo, the chief legal officer at Human Rights First, which is backing Murrell in the lawsuit, but to bankrupt Patriot Front.

“Our goal is to decimate this extremist group,” she said, “and bring a national spotlight to the dangers of their extremist ideology.”

It’s a similar tactic used against multiple white supremacist groups involved at the deadly “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, which resulted in a $26 million verdict.

“That bankrupted and marginalized the leading hate groups that were involved in Charlottesville and really pulled back the curtain, through the discovery process, on how these groups operate,” said Amy Spitalnick, the senior adviser on extremism for Human Rights First.

The suit, which alleges among other things civil rights violations, assault and battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, seeks a jury trial and unspecified damages.

Founded after the “Unite the Right” rally, Patriot Front’s manifesto calls for the formation of a white ethnostate in the United States, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center’s website.

It’s members post flyers and stickers, put banners on buildings or overpasses and even perform acts of public service, designed to maximize propaganda value, the SPLC said.

Also active online, the Patriot Front is one of the nation’s most visible white supremacist groups “whose members maintain that their ancestors conquered America and bequeathed it to them, and no one else,” according to the Anti-Defamation League.

Five members of the group were sentenced to several days in jail for conspiring to riot at a Pride event in Idaho last year. A jury found them guilty of the riot charge after after they were accused of planning to riot at the Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, LGBTQ+ Pride event.

A total of 31 Patriot Front members, including one identified as its founder, were arrested June 11, 2022, after someone reported seeing people loading into a U-Haul van like “a little army” at a hotel parking lot in Coeur d’Alene, police said at the time. Police said they found riot gear, a smoke grenade, shin guards and shields in the van.
 
So to recap, we have kids coming to New England to call New Englanders backwards hicks that are as full of hatred as Southerners. That will definitely get us on your side 👍

Is it possible that some of these bodies are from within New England as well?

And any idea from what other states are these bodies coming in from?
 
I was born, raised, and still live in New England, and I'm getting pushed towards the right.
You know who's doing the pushing?
Teenagers and college kids (online and in-person; there are five colleges in my area) that scream about how evil white people are, how gross cis people are, how bigoted gay people are for not getting over their icky genital preferences and having queer sex with trannies to whom they're not attracted, how evil the history of America is.

I posted elsewhere how some liberals just can't wrap their minds around people with mixed ancestry. Every November there's a deluge of "the Pilgrims were colonists which means they were evil thieves that stole land and raped natives and you're responsible for the actions of your ancestors 400 years ago!"
If I dare mention having native ancestry I get called "1/64th Cherokee like Elizabeth Warren" and mocked for not even knowing my tribe (I do, my grandmother was Abenaki)

Then there are the college kids that come and protest family farms and call them evil animal abusers. These are family farms on main roads, the cows can be seen wandering their pastures, they're nothing like a factory farm.
And yet there are the college kids with their posters calling local families animal abusers. That really gets the locals on their side.

So to recap, we have kids coming to New England to call New Englanders backwards hicks that are as full of hatred as Southerners. That will definitely get us on your side 👍
Tell them the first arrivals (natives) should have been better at war LMAO.

Those kids need multiple ass kickings
 
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I'm from New England and I never heard of them before they did that gay march for the January 6th event when no one but feds showed up.
 
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