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  White Supremacists
Neo-Nazi leader's past resurfaces on day of triumph
 
 
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National Socialist Movement commander Jeff Schoep
(Jennifer Warburg)
For Jeff Schoep, uniform-clad commander of the neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement (NSM), Sept. 25 was a big day — in more ways than he had anticipated.

On the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, Schoep's troops held a white-power rally at historic Valley Forge National Historical Park in Pennsylvania. More than 100 white supremacists, including members of the Ku Klux Klan and Aryan Nations, came to cheer the commander's attack on Jews, whom he said were plotting "the destruction of all races through the evils of race-mixing."

When the public-address system went down 10 minutes into Schoep's invective, his supporters shot out their arms and shouted "Sieg Heil!" repeatedly until the problem was repaired.

Schoep's triumph was tarnished by an embarrassing exposé that appeared that same morning in the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

Based in Minnesota, the National Socialist Movement — which claims to be the nation's largest neo-Nazi organization, though it has only about 200 members — says members should be gainfully employed and positively contributing to society.

But as reporter Jon Tevlin discovered, the 30-year-old Schoep hardly fits that description himself, with a string of petty crimes on his record, including a felony arrest in 1998 for aiding and abetting a burglary.

According to court records, Schoep — who was unemployed at the time, and apparently still is — was arrested for accompanying the mother of his daughter when she stole $4,000 worth of computer equipment. Four children were in the back seat of the car during the burglary.

Schoep, who had become NSM commander four years before the incident, pleaded guilty and got off with probation — but not before District Judge Sharon Hall took him to task for gross hypocrisy.

The NSM, she pointed out, "does not condone fathering children around the countryside and taking no financial responsibility. And it does not condone the commission of crimes. I also know that your organization believes that there are various minority groups in this country that do that on a regular basis."

Schoep told the Star Tribune his crimes were "in the past," and claimed to be "taking care of my children." In the NSM, he insisted, "We stress legality and we're against people breaking the law" — though a registered sex offender, John Snyder, leads the Indiana chapter of the NSM, which puts a special emphasis on recruiting teenagers.

 
 
 
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'Easy Prey'
Issue 116 | Winter 2004
 
EDITORIAL
The Immigration Backlash
ON THE COVER:
'EASY PREY'
In Georgia, Violence Against Immigrants Rising
La batalla de 'Georgiafornia'
ALABAMA GETAWAY
Its Founder Dead, Aryan Nations Heads South
RETURN OF THE PASTOR
Red-Hot Neo-Nazi Wickstrom is Back
THEY'RE BACK
Extremist Ex-Cons Hit the Streets
LITTLE MEN
Where Do Neo-Confederate Ideas Come From?
THE IDEOLOGUES
Neo-Confederate Intellectuals Drive Movement
CONFEDERATES IN THE MUSEUM
'Pro-South' Activists Pressure History Professionals
INTELLIGENCE BRIEFS
Neo-Nazi Leader's Criminal Past Surfaces
Arizona Border Vigilantes Under Fire
Wal-Mart Plugs Neo-Confederate Texts
Heritage Groups Keep Convicted 'Aryan' Plotter
Hate Music Label Woos Schoolchildren
Ex-Guardsman Planned Slaughter of Jews
BOOKS ON THE RIGHT
Who Was Nathan Bedford Forrest?
LEGAL BRIEF
How Can Prosecutors Use Evidence of Racism?
THE LAST WORD
Antigovernment Churches Have a New Enemy