Around downtown Charlottesville’s brick-lined pedestrian walking mall, two things were in abundance on Saturday: heavily armed police and television cameras.
Around downtown Charlottesville’s brick-lined pedestrian walking mall, two things were in abundance on Saturday: heavily armed police and television cameras.
The Unite the Right rally in August 2017 looked to be a coming-out party of sorts for the racist "alt-right" as well as a turning point for the white supremacist and white nationalist movement in the country.
Jason Kessler has been all over the map about how large his planned “Unite the Right 2” rally in Washington, D.C., will be and even who will attend.
The organizer of the deadly “Unite the Right” rally is dropping his legal fight with Charlottesville over how the city issues permits and the denial of permission to hold a second rally in town this year.
As they struggle, others step in and take their place.
For Jason Eric Kessler, the fall came swiftly and proved to be severe.
Elliott Kline has been quiet for nearly six months, with no public posts on social media or public appearances.
As the first anniversary of Unite the Right approached, Charlottesville festers with high tensions and uncertainty as to what might happen on August 11 and 12.
First, the question was “Where’s Jason Kessler?”
Immediately after the deadly “Unite the Right” white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, last August 11 and 12, far-fetched conspiracy theories blossomed on the internet.