If racist "alt-right" organizer Jason Kessler goes through with a second “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, he’ll be legally barred from being armed during any organized protests.
If racist "alt-right" organizer Jason Kessler goes through with a second “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, he’ll be legally barred from being armed during any organized protests.
The bulk of a lawsuit against a group of alt-right activists, neo-Nazis and racists stemming from the deadly “Unite the Right” rally can go forward after a federal judge concluded that a group of Charlottesville residents “plausibly alleged” a conspiracy to engage in racial violence among the groups.
He likes to dress as a Confederate soldier, sing “Dixie” online and buy guns. Now, he wants out of jail and thinks his attorney isn’t doing enough to make it happen.
Editor's note: On June 25, two months after this interview, Chris Eddy died. Her funeral service will be held today – July 6.
Members of the racist group, League of the South, gathered to meet and make their views known publicly, but heavy rain kept them indoors and away from the limelight.
After five people were gunned down in their own newsroom, the normally feisty editorial page of the Capital-Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland, went silent Friday.
An Ohio man has been charged with more than 30 hate crimes, including intentionally killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer, for his actions during the disastrous “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Another town, another arrest — racist Kynan Dutton was arrested over the weekend at a Tennessee Pride event that drew an odd assortment from the extremist fringe.
In response to the election of two town council members suspected to maintain associations with neo-Nazi Craig Cobb, officials in Leith, North Dakota, are moving forward with plans to dissolve the town government.
What should have been a joyful day at a family wedding for Joel Vangheluwe and his dad, Jerome, turned into a nightmare.