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- <text id=93TT0251>
- <title>
- July 26, 1993: Today Los Angeles, Tomorrow...
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TERRORISM, Page 49
- Today Los Angeles, Tomorrow...</hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An alleged plot by white supremacists to start a race war is
- foiled
- </p>
- <p>By CHRISTOPHER JOHN FARLEY--With reporting by Sylvester Monroe/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> A group of skinheads in California had a dream, but it was
- decidedly different from the one imagined by Martin Luther King.
- Their vision allegedly went like this: a phalanx of skinheads
- with machine guns would invade the First African Methodist Episcopal
- Church in Los Angeles. The congregation would be sprayed with
- bullets, and the pastor, (the Rev.) Cecil Murray, would be murdered.
- Across the U.S., other blacks were potential targets--Rodney
- King, (the Rev.) Al Sharpton, the rap group Public Enemy, perhaps
- even a baseball player. An all-out race war would be triggered,
- a final, bloody Ragnarok of the races.
- </p>
- <p> It's a phantasm that won't come true. Last week a coalition
- of federal and local law-enforcement officials in Los Angeles
- launched an assault on white supremacists, arresting eight people,
- including one adult and one unnamed juvenile who were implicated
- in the plot. Authorities said the suspects were affiliated with
- three white-power groups: Tom Metzger's White Aryan Resistance
- (WAR), the Church of the Creator, and a relatively new group
- called the Fourth Reich Skinheads. Among those taken into custody
- were Christian Gilbert Nadal, 35, a flight engineer for Continental
- Airlines and his wife Doris, 41, a real estate agent. Most of
- the suspects were slapped with various federal weapons charges,
- but Christopher David Fisher, the 20-year-old leader of the
- 50-member Fourth Reich Skinheads, was also charged in the plot
- to attack the A.M.E. church and kill well-known blacks and Jews.
- </p>
- <p> The arrests came just days after the Anti-Defamation League
- of B'nai B'rith released a survey on the growth of the skinhead
- movement in America. In 1988 there were about 1,500 skinheads
- in 12 states; today there are about 3,500 in 40 states, and
- they are responsible for at least 22 killings over the past
- three years. "The skinheads are today the most violent of all
- white-supremacy groups," the B'nai B'rith report concluded.
- "Not even the Ku Klux Klan, so notorious for their use of the
- rope and the gun, comes close." An FBI source has told TIME
- that one of the juvenile members of the Fourth Reich Skinheads
- arrested last week is being charged with a pipe-bomb attack
- against a member of the "Spur Posse," the gang of teenage boys
- in Lakewood, California, that won notoriety earlier this year
- for awarding points among themselves for sexual conquests. According
- to an affidavit, the Spur Posse member was targeted partly because
- he was half Asian and half Mexican.
- </p>
- <p> The FBI, whose investigation began 18 months ago, planted an
- undercover agent inside the white-supremacist community; one
- of their civilian informants even posed as a minister of the
- Church of the Creator. The agent was allegedly told by the plotters
- that killing the pastor of the A.M.E. church would "stir the
- masses," that "half-assed revolutions" don't work, and that
- killing black leaders was the way to start the race war. One
- skinhead said that "an average dumb nigger" should be slain
- so the group could bond with blood. The violent rhetoric seemed
- at odds with some of the members' backgrounds. Fisher, the skinhead
- leader, is the son of a grade-school teacher and a computer-science
- inneighbors say many of his friends are nonwhite. But the relative
- of another suspect saw trouble coming. "He said he was fed up
- with Mexicans, blacks," said Rene Nadal of his son Christian.
- "I tried to convince him not to hate."
- </p>
- <p> When several of the conspirators almost finished assembling
- a letter bomb to send to a rabbi in Orange County, the FBI decided
- to make the arrests. "It was a judgment call that they might
- do something without telling us," said Charlie Parsons, special
- agent in charge of the FBI's Los Angeles field office. ``These
- people are very unpredictable, and it's been like riding a bucking
- horse." Announcing the arrests, authorities displayed an array
- of racist paraphernalia and weaponry taken from the homes of
- the suspects: pipe bombs, machine guns, a Confederate flag,
- a Nazi flag and a framed portrait of Adolf Hitler.
- </p>
- <p> "This is one of the most successful infiltrations of white-supremacist
- groups to date," said Terree Bowers, U.S. Attorney for the Central
- District of California, whose office will prosecute most of
- those arrested. "We think it will put a severe dent in the skinhead
- movement in Southern California."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-