www.splcenter.org
Sitemap | Contact | Search | Employment
 
  Subscribe to SPLC news:
  Intelligence Project History  
  Intelligence Report  
  Hate Groups Map  
  Hate Incidents  
  Law Enforcement Training  
Hate Map
Hate Map

  Neo-Confederates
Despite revelations, heritage groups keep convicted 'Aryan' plotter in the fold
 
 
null
Michael Tubbs joined other League of the South members in protesting against the Southern Poverty Law Center in October.
(Penny Weaver)
Michael Tubbs, a prominent member of Florida's chapter of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, resigned his post as chaplain of the state organization in October after his remarkable criminal past was brought to light in an Intelligence Report exposé.

The Fall 2004 Report detailed Tubbs' record (see C-4 and the Confederacy), which includes a 1987 armed robbery that prosecutors say the former Green Beret committed in the name of the Ku Klux Klan. Authorities subsequently discovered that Tubbs had amassed a stockpile of weapons and explosives, stolen from military installations while Tubbs was in the service.

The munitions were part of a plan to form a racist group targeting prominent black and Jewish targets. After pleading guilty to theft and conspiracy charges, Tubbs served four years in prison.

This was not the first time a scandal involving extremists in the Florida SCV caused a ruckus. In 2002, John Adams, then commander of the state organization, was responsible for flooding an Intelligence Report writer's inbox with some 250 pornographic e-mails (see Dirty Tricks in the Winter 2003 issue).

That incident was later made public by the magazine, much to the SCV's embarrassment. Adams, who was also Webmaster and adjutant-in-chief of the national SCV, was stripped of those posts as a result.

Some SCV members saw Tubbs' prominence in the Florida chapter as a similar debacle, casting a group that professes to be peaceful, law-abiding and non-racist in a drastically different light. "I'm just praying it does not get circulated in the legislature like the porno episode did," Florida SCV First Commander Bob Mays wrote in an e-mail message circulated to Florida division members.

Florida's second commander, David Hackel, was just plain outraged. "This type of news is just too much," he wrote, demanding a full investigation of the charges and an emergency meeting of Florida's remaining SCV officers.

But not all SCV members were disturbed. Two days after the story broke, Florida Division Commander David Dawson acknowledged Tubbs' criminal past in a letter to members, but commended his contributions to the group.

"That time was served some 15 years ago and his debt to society was paid in full when he was released," Dawson wrote. His letter went on to say that while Tubbs had chosen to resign as chaplain, he would remain an SCV member. As for disciplinary actions, Dawson said Tubbs' local SCV "camp" in Jacksonsville "must be left to decide if his history meets any test requiring discipline of SCV members."

Apparently, Tubbs' history suits members of an overtly racist neo-Confederate group, the League of the South (LOS), just fine.

Days after his resignation as Florida SCV chaplain was announced in October, Tubbs, who also is vice chairman of the LOS' Northeast Florida chapter, appeared at the hate group's annual national conference in Montgomery, Ala.

Tubbs joined other LOS members in a demonstration outside the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), where a smattering of some 30 conference-goers placed Confederate flags and a pink toilet near the Center's Civil Rights Memorial and held up signs saying, "Flush the SPLC."

 
 
 
  Subscribe to the Intelligence Report  
 
 
  Advanced Search: Intelligence Report  
 
 
'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