Sunday, September 25, 2011

The Beginning of the Aryan Brotherhood Gang



  • The Aryan Brotherhood got its start on the West Coast in the 1960s.
  • The Brotherhood, which has members in prisons throughout the United States, exhibits an intense hatred of Blacks and Jews, and reportedly engages in extortion, drug operations, prostitution, and violence in prisons.
  • Many Brotherhood members sport an identifying tattoo consisting of a swastika and the Nazi SS lightening bolt.
  • The Brotherhood has ties to Aryan Nations, an Idaho-based paramilitary organization that advocates racial violence and white supremacy.
  • In April 1997, John Stojetz, an Aryan Brotherhood leader at an Ohio prison, was convicted in the murder of a 17-year-old Black prisoner.
  • Since 1996, six murders of inmates at the Pelican Bay State Prison in California have been linked to the Aryan Brotherhood. A local prosecutor characterized the situation at the prison as a "reign of terror." More than 50 inmates in the prison's maximum-security unit are members of the group.
  • In October 1994, Donald Riley, a member of the Brotherhood, was sentenced to life in prison for the murder in Houston of a Black marine who had recently returned from service in Desert Storm.
  • Aryan Brotherhood member Roy Slider was convicted in August 1993 of felonious assault in an attack on a correction officer, Thomas Davis, in Ohio. Prison officials said Slider went after Davis because he was Black. Davis died as a result of the attack.
  • In the 1980s, Brotherhood members challenged a Missouri prison's ban on inmates receiving literature from Aryan Nations and similar groups. Nevertheless, the courts upheld the ban.
  • The Missouri inmates were also members of a "Christian Identity" organization, the Church of Jesus Christ Christian. Members of the "Identity" movement claim that Anglo-Saxons not Jews are the Biblical "chosen people," that nonwhites are mud people on the level of animals, and that Jews are the "children of Satan.
"Aryan Brotherhood and the Turner Diaries ." ADL, June 10th 1998. Web. 25 Sep. 2011. <http://www.adl.org/presrele/hatcr_51/3177-51.asp>.)



1 comment:

  1. Good work; keep pushing analysis and connecting to course readings? How does this group connect to other groups we have talked about; what does this tell us? How are they often presented?

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