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  • #16
    Should White Supremacists Be Allowed To Practice Law?

    Should White Supremacists Be Allowed To Practice Law?

    he legal profession is supposed to weed out people who aren’t morally fit to be lawyers. But they let neo-Nazis in.

    By Jessica Schulberg



    https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry...b0b0e5a7a2232d
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7426#post17426
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7426#post17426



    Nazi jew lawyer vs. gliberal nigger lawyer, cum-cum, cum-cum !!!

    A few years ago, before he helped organize the deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, Augustus Sol Invictus sent a mass email to his friends, colleagues and acquaintances to announce that he was embarking on a spiritual journey to launch “the Second American Civil War.” Invictus — who legally changed his name from “Austin Gillespie” to the Latin for “majestic unconquered sun” — hitchhiked out West, where he fasted and prayed in the desert. When he returned home to Florida, he slaughtered a goat and drank its blood.

    White supremacist leader Richard Spencer later credited Invictus, who believes white people are facing genocide at the hands of Syrian refugees and Islamic State terrorists, with drafting an early version of the Charlottesville Statement, a political manifesto released at the August rally. The final version of this document called for a white ethnostate, described Jews as ethnically distinct from Europeans, warned that the “so-called ‘refugee crisis’ is an invasion,” and claimed that “leftism is an ideology of death and must be confronted or defeated.”

    There are, as the nation learned after the violence in Charlottesville, plenty of white supremacists willing to espouse their views publicly. What makes Invictus unusual is that until recently, he held a position of power and responsibility — one that is supposed to come with a promise that the holder is of good character and respects the rights and liberties of others: He was a practicing lawyer.

    In one of his higher-profile cases, Invictus represented Marcus Faella, the former head of the neo-Nazi American Front, in appealing his conviction for teaching and conducting paramilitary training, allegedly in preparation for starting a “race war.” Invictus maintains that Faella was innocent and became close friends with him and other members of the American Front, he told HuffPost. He also named his law practice Imperium, P.A., after a book written by the mid-20th century Nazi sympathizer Francis Parker Yockey.

    Invictus retired from the Florida Bar in March 2017, just a few months before he helped plan the white nationalist gathering in Charlottesville. But because he voluntarily withdrew from the bar, he can petition for reinstatement at any time. And he had plenty of ideological company in the legal profession: HuffPost has identified over a dozen current and former lawyers openly affiliated with white supremacist groups.

    I first started tracking white supremacist and Nazi lawyers after I received a phone call from Mark Zaid, a lawyer and a source of mine in Washington. In the aftermath of the Charlottesville rally, Zaid, like many other Americans, was grappling with how to confront the far-right extremists who proudly gathered there, seemingly without fear of consequences. There would be no rebuke from the White House. Although anti-fascist vigilantes launched their own efforts to bring about accountability, naming and shaming rally-goers and pressuring their employers to sever ties, this ad hoc response was inevitably flawed. The amateur sleuths got some white supremacists fired. But they also targeted some people who weren’t even involved. And free speech advocates warned that firing people because of their beliefs — no matter how abhorrent — could set a dangerous precedent.

    Perhaps there was a better way to hold some white supremacists accountable, Zaid mused. Being a lawyer, he noted, is different from most jobs. Lawyers know their clients’ most closely held secrets. Their actions can mean the difference between people going free or spending years in prison, between victims getting justice or nothing. In legal settlements that result in financial compensation, the money goes first to the lawyer, who is entrusted to pass it along to the client. And because of their inside understanding of how the legal system works, lawyers are uniquely equipped to protect themselves from charges of wrongdoing.

    Because of all this, the legal profession is one of the few that requires members to uphold a certain moral standard. In addition to taking the bar exam, aspiring attorneys face a character and fitness test before they can be admitted to their state’s bar and practice law. Lawyers can — in theory — get kicked out of the profession at any time for failing to uphold their state bar association’s ethics rules.

    The initial character and fitness test is generally treated as a formality, the requirements vary by state, and enforcement can seem ad hoc. But there are individuals who fail. People have been denied bar admission because of a past gambling problem, delinquent debt, a substance abuse issue or dishonesty. Stephen Glass, a former New Republic reporter who had fabricated characters, quotes and events in more than two dozen stories he wrote for the magazine in the 1990s, was warned off by the New York bar and later rejected outright by the California bar.

    Defining moral character is an admittedly subjective endeavor — but marching with neo-Nazis would seem to signal character flaws.

    .


    Cukfederuts & Nutzis go ass-to-mouth at Charlottesville 12 Aug 2017
    .

    Although being an avowed racist doesn’t explicitly violate the rules that govern lawyers’ conduct, it can be a problem, said Keith Swisher, a legal ethics professor at the University of Arizona’s law school.

    “If a lawyer is truly racist, that presents questions as to whether that lawyer can competently and diligently and fairly represent all clients,” he argued.

    In practice, it’s almost unheard of for aspiring lawyers to be denied admission to the bar because of their ideology or for existing lawyers to be punished for expressing their views. Privacy restrictions make it hard to know exactly how often this does happen. The last case to make public waves was nearly 20 years ago, when Illinois’ character committee denied bar admission to Matthew Hale, a white supremacist who said he wanted “to be an advocate for white people in the courtroom.” But instead of inspiring a broader push to root out racists from the legal community, the Hale case and its subsequent backlash may have made bar admission officials more wary of disqualifying people for any reason that could seem to violate free speech rights.

    The Matthew Hale Precedent

    When he applied for admission to the bar in 1998, Hale made no attempt to hide his beliefs. He disclosed his active efforts to promote racism and anti-Semitism in his application for admission to the Illinois State Bar. He refused to disavow a 1995 letter he wrote in response to a commentary piece that supported affirmative action, in which he referred to the author’s “rape at the hands of a nigger beast.”

    A panel of bar admission officials voted 2-1 to deny Hale a license to practice law. They said that the courts and the bar are committed to the principle of equality under the law, regardless of race, ethnicity, religion or national origin.

    “The balance of values that we strike leaves Matthew Hale free, as the First Amendment allows, to incite as much racial hatred as he desires and to attempt to carry out his life’s mission of depriving those he dislikes of their legal right. But in our view he cannot do this as an officer of the court,” the panel wrote.

    After another panel upheld the decision, Hale hired Glenn Greenwald, then an outspoken constitutional lawyer, and sued the Committee on Character and Fitness.

    .

    Like with every attempt to have the state regulate free speech ... it always starts with the most extreme examples — but it does necessarily set a precedent, whether that’s the intention or not.
    Glenn Greenwald, lawyer for Matthew Hale
    .

    The character and fitness process “resembled a Spanish Inquisition-like interrogation of a person’s political thoughts, religious convictions, and core beliefs,” Greenwald wrote in a complaint filed in federal court. “The vast bulk of the questions were those which would be expected from a tribunal charged with policing a person’s thoughts and beliefs, not a person’s conduct, character and fitness to practice law,” continued Greenwald, who is now a journalist at The Intercept.

    At the time, the Illinois bar wasn’t exactly looking for a fight over whether an applicant’s ideology should disqualify him from being a lawyer, Greenwald told HuffPost. But Hale’s views were so toxic that it was hard to argue in good faith that he was of sound moral character.

    “The problem, of course, is like with every attempt to have the state regulate free speech, is that it always starts with the most extreme examples — but it does necessarily set a precedent, whether that’s the intention or not,” Greenwald told HuffPost.

    Hale lost the case, but the decision was immediately controversial. The Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish civil rights group, defended his right “to spew his venom without restriction.” George Anastaplo, a law professor at Loyola University Chicago who had been denied admission to the Illinois bar in 1950 for refusing to answer questions about whether he was involved with the Communist Party, described the Hale decision as “dangerous and otherwise self-defeating.” The panel essentially punished Hale for having abhorrent views without proving that those views would prevent him from being a good lawyer, attorney Jason O. Billy wrote in 2006 in the Harvard BlackLetter Law Journal.

    Hale was eventually arrested and charged with soliciting an undercover FBI informant to kill the judge presiding over a trademark case involving his World Church of the Creator. He is currently serving a 40-year prison sentence.

    Counsel For White Supremacism

    Like Hale, Kyle Bristow had left a well-documented paper trail of his extreme beliefs by the time he applied for a license to practice law. As a college student at Michigan State University, Bristow organized a “straight power” rally in protest of proposed legislation to protect the LGBTQ community and held a “Koran desecration” contest. He unsuccessfully tried to plan a “Catch an Illegal Immigrant Day” and to host white nationalist Jared Taylor at the university.

    While at the University of Toledo law school, Bristow self-published a novel that the Southern Poverty Law Center has described as “seething with lethal white supremacist revenge fantasies against Jewish professors, Latino and American Indian activists and staffers of a group clearly modeled on the SPLC.”

    In 2011, Bristow argued that gay and mixed race couples debase the white race by not producing white babies. In a 2012 compilation of essays, he claimed ancient Egyptians administered the death penalty to anyone who brought a black person into Egypt. They understood that “their civilization would be threatened if they bred with the Negroes to their south,” Bristow wrote.

    But unlike Hale, Bristow was admitted to practice law in Ohio in 2012 and Michigan in 2013.

    Bristow was worried he would be denied admission to the bar because of his involvement in the white nationalist movement, his former wife Ashley Herzog told the SPLC. “He had a whole strategy for how he was going to go in there and distract them with questions so that they couldn’t bring up any questions,” Herzog said. “He even went under a different name. He worked as James Bristow. For a year his boss thought that was his name.” (James is Kyle’s middle name.)

    Bristow told HuffPost he never worked under a different name and “you’d be a moron to think otherwise.” HuffPost couldn’t independently confirm that he had been employed under any name other than Kyle Bristow.

    On his blogspot.com website, Bristow advertises his ability to help law school graduates with the character and fitness part of the bar admission process. But he denied ever having concerns about passing the character and fitness test himself.

    “Saying anything to the contrary is horseshit,” Bristow wrote in an email. “I’m an award-winning, highly rated, ethical lawyer. The only thing that makes me different from my colleagues is that I care about true freedom, the U.S. Constitution, and I strongly [sic] liberals who are trying to ruin America.” (Asked about the missing word in his response, he wrote, “‘Dislike’ goes between ‘strongly’ and ‘liberals.’”)

    Bristow now works with Richard Spencer, suing and threatening to sue universities that don’t want to give the white supremacist leader a platform to speak. That and going ass-to-mouth with Ol' Niggerlips The Mamzer of Mentor who is Kylke's "brain" and who harasses real White Supremacists like Pastor Lindstedt and the Church of Jesus Christ Christian / Aryan Nations of Missouri.

    .


    1/8 jew mischling Dickie lifts up itz paws impersonating Hitler Oct. 19, 2017, at the University of Florida which didn't want the kike yapping there
    .

    By the end of her marriage to Bristow, Herzog was worried that his racist rants would escalate into acts of violence. He stockpiled weapons and talked with his friends about “how they’re hoping to instigate this race war so that we can all become this separate white state,” Herzog told the SPLC.

    Anne Yeager from the Supreme Court of Ohio, which oversees disciplinary action against lawyers, declined to comment on whether stockpiling weapons and discussing plans to start a race war would be grounds for disbarment.

    Alan Gershel of Michigan’s Attorney Grievance Commission also declined to discuss specific examples of lawyers’ conduct. In general, he said, Michigan lawyers will face discipline for felony convictions and are often investigated for misdemeanor convictions. Gershel’s office can also investigate a lawyer based on a complaint submitted to his office. In 2016, his office received about 2,100 such complaints, he said. Only 160 resulted in public discipline, although other cases led to nonpublic admonishments.

    Bristow is still licensed to practice law in both states.

    The ABA Has A Suggestion
    There is some indication that the American Bar Association wants to take on racist lawyers. The ABA adopted a model rule last year stating that it is “professional misconduct” for a lawyer to “engage in conduct that the lawyer knows or reasonably should know is harassment or discrimination” on the basis of race, religion or ethnicity, among other things. The rule applies to all “conduct related to the practice of law,” not just an attorney’s interaction with a client or behavior in court. But model rules are just that: models that state bar associations can choose to ignore.

    Vermont became the first state to adopt the ABA’s model rule in July, but others have been slow to get on board. Several state bar associations have their own, narrower anti-discrimination provisions, and critics of the ABA proposal say its broad wording risks infringing on free speech rights.

    The ABA’s model rule “is a pervasive speech code for lawyers, including on matters unrelated to any pending litigation,” UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh argued in Duke Law’s Judicature journal this past spring. It would “likely cover debates at continuing legal education programs, discussions on bar panels, and even conversations over dinner at a bar function,” he said.

    Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) said last year that if his state were to adopt the model rule, it would likely be struck down in court as unconstitutional. Montana’s state legislature has opposed adopting the rule. And South Carolina’s Supreme Court declined to adopt the rule in June.

    The next test of state bar associations’ willingness to confront racist lawyers could come in Pennsylvania. Evan McLaren graduated from Penn State’s Dickinson School of Law in May and took the bar exam in July. He went to work for Richard Spencer and showed up at the Charlottesville rally in August. He was arrested and convicted on misdemeanor charges of failing to disperse, which he is currently challenging, he told HuffPost.

    Some of McLaren’s classmates from law school received their licenses to practice law around the time they got the results of their bar exam in October, but McLaren is still waiting on his. He told HuffPost he hasn’t received his license yet because he hasn’t submitted all the required paperwork. But the process could also be delayed by complaints about McLaren filed with the Pennsylvania Board of Law Examiners, the group that determines whether applicants are of sound enough character to be admitted to the bar.

    Tito Valdes, an attorney who went to law school with McLaren, told HuffPost that he spoke earlier this year to a character and fitness investigator from the Board of Law Examiners who wanted to know about his experiences with McLaren. In response, Valdes submitted documents detailing instances in which he believes McLaren harassed people who disagreed with him on race and social justice issues.

    .

    "The 14th Amendment is not some special interests amendment for women and people of color and the LGBT community — it’s equal to the First Amendment."
    Tito Valdes, who went to law school with Evan McLaren
    .

    What can be lost in the debate about white supremacists’ rights are the rights of their victims. In particular, Valdes pointed to the 14th Amendment, which guarantees every person within the United States “the equal protection of the laws.”

    “The 14th Amendment is not some special interests amendment for women and people of color and the LGBT community — it’s equal to the First Amendment. So you have to figure out what the balance is,” Valdes said.

    In November, a Pennsylvania lawyer anonymously submitted a letter to the Board of Law Examiners arguing that McLaren’s affiliation with white nationalist groups brings into question his fitness to practice law. The lawyer, who told HuffPost he does not personally know McLaren, cited McLaren’s role in Charlottesville and his participation in an October anti-refugee rally in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, hosted by the white supremacist group Identity Evropa.

    McLaren “would be unable to adequately represent clients he deems are not ‘white,’ and he would inevitably target or discriminate against opponents or adversaries who do not fit or share his concept of whiteness,” wrote the attorney, who is a member of the progressive National Lawyers Guild.

    Before McLaren landed his job with Spencer, he thought about pursuing a career as a prosecutor ― a position in which he would have played a major role in determining the fate of accused lawbreakers. He was a volunteer law clerk at the Cumberland County District Attorney’s office during law school and he liked “the public service element” of the work, he told HuffPost. As a certified legal intern, he was even allowed to argue some minor cases in traffic court, he said.

    But after McLaren turned up at Charlottesville alongside Spencer, District Attorney David Freed distanced himself from the former clerk and vowed to expand his office’s vetting process for volunteer clerks.

    Pennsylvania is currently considering its own, narrower version of the ABA’s anti-discrimination rule. Whereas the ABA rule covers conduct that a lawyer “knows or reasonably should know” is discrimination, the Pennsylvania rule would apply only to lawyers who violate federal, state or local statutes that prohibit discrimination.

    Valdes, the former classmate, predicts McLaren will eventually get a license to practice law in Pennsylvania. “Bar examiners across the country are just really hesitant to sort of flirt with the line of what is free speech,” he said.

    First They Came For The Nazis?
    Although McLaren receiving a law license would frustrate people who fear that he will use his law degree to advance white nationalist causes, some of McLaren’s fiercest ideological opponents argue that state bar organizations are correct to be cautious about judging aspiring lawyers on their beliefs.

    For years, state bars worked to exclude Communists, African-Americans, and women from the legal profession. The anti-discrimination rules proposed by the ABA, however well-intentioned, could be used to similarly exclude members of marginalized groups, argued Kenneth White, a lawyer who runs the legal blog Popehat.

    “We might like it when it’s used against racists, but who knows how it will be used otherwise?” White said. “I don’t think it’s a hypothetical or slippery slope to think it might be used badly by state bars.”

    Earlier this year, White and a security researcher named Asher Langton both filed complaints with the State Bar of Texas against Jason Van Dyke, a lawyer who is a member of a racist, thuggish group called the Proud Boys, for making violent threats against them. (The Proud Boys deny being racists. They describe themselves as “western chauvinists.”) Van Dyke told HuffPost that all of the allegations from White and Langton are “completely false.”

    Van Dyke’s rants aimed at White, Langton and others — including rapper Talib Kweli — feature racist, homophobic and sexist slurs. But White emphasized in his report that he thought Van Dyke should be penalized for making “true threats,” not for his ideology.

    “I don’t think it should be the state bar’s job to police people for being racists or other assholes,” White told HuffPost. “If white supremacists are doing objectionable stuff, you should be able to find them in violation of the rules [of professional conduct],” he argued.

    .

    I don’t think it should be the state bar’s job to police people for being racists or other assholes.
    Kenneth White of the legal blog Popehat
    .

    That strategy can be successful. Edgar Steele, who was an anti-Semitic defense attorney for the founder of the Aryan Nations, was disbarred in Washington state in 2012, but probably not for his views. The state bar tossed him out after he was convicted of plotting to kill his wife and her mother. Steele, who maintained his innocence, died in prison.

    The State Bar of Texas has already publicly condemned some of Van Dyke’s statements as “reprehensible and contrary to the values we hold as Texas lawyers.” The organization doesn’t comment on pending investigations, but White and Langton told HuffPost they had communicated with bar investigators about Van Dyke as recently as November.

    Even when white nationalist lawyers aren’t formally punished by state bar organizations, the public outing of their beliefs and behavior can make it difficult for them to sustain careers as lawyers. Sam Dickson, an avowed racist who represented members of the Ku Klux Klan, told HuffPost that the SPLC ruined his career by publishing a report alleging that Dickson got rich through predatory real estate practices, often targeting black residents in Atlanta. Dickson, who disputes the group’s characterization of his work, told HuffPost that people who don’t believe in racial equality are being discriminated against through a “McCarthyism in leftist form.”

    Last year, the Baltimore city government cut ties with Glen Keith Allen, who had helped represent the city’s police in a wrongful prosecution case involving a black plaintiff, after the SPLC revealed that Allen had paid membership dues to the white supremacist National Alliance and was a member of the racist American Eagle Party. Allen has had trouble finding work since, he told HuffPost. Like Dickson, he characterizes himself as a victim of leftist thought policing.

    “You know what? Maybe people have controversial views going on inside their head, but let’s judge them by their actions,” Allen said.

    The Threat Of Violence


    White supremacy is rooted in a long history of violent actions by its adherents. Several of Invictus’ former girlfriends and acquaintances have accused him of violent behavior, although he has never been charged in those cases. One accuser told a law enforcement official that she was afraid to report his abusive behavior because he was a lawyer.

    In the summer of 2014, a then-roommate told an Orlando, Florida, police officer that Invictus had pointed a loaded gun at him while they were both in the house. Once Invictus lowered the gun, he said he thought his roommate was an intruder, according to the police report. (Reached by HuffPost, the former roommate said he didn’t have time to discuss the incident.)

    In March 2016, a woman told an Orlando police officer that she was scared of Invictus, her ex-boyfriend. He had battered her several times over the course of their two-year relationship, she alleged, but she didn’t report the incidents at the time. She went to the police after they broke up because Invictus had told a friend he was going to burn all of the woman’s possessions and “shoot her on the spot,” she explained to authorities, according to a police report detailing the woman’s account. (HuffPost could not identify the woman.)

    Invictus did not respond to a request for comment about the 2014 and 2016 incidents.

    In the fall of 2015, Invictus met a high-school senior at a rotary event and encouraged her to join the Boone High School debate team, where he told her he was the coach. At the time, Invictus was running as a Libertarian to replace Sen. Marco Rubio (R). Weeks later, the teenage girl began an “intimate relationship” with Invictus and his then-girlfriend, she told a law enforcement official in Altamonte Springs, Florida.

    Over time, Invictus became abusive, according to a police report documenting the victim’s allegations. (HuffPost doesn’t name victims or alleged victims of sexual assault without their consent. The young woman declined to comment, citing fear of retribution from Invictus and his supporters.) The woman described one incident to the police in which he allegedly slapped her in the face, climbed on top of her, covered her mouth and nose until she couldn’t breathe, and punched her in the side of the head.

    Another time, he punched her in the stomach, grabbed her hair, dragged her into a closet and choked her until she passed out, she told the police. When she woke up, he was holding what she felt was a gun to her head, but she was too scared to open her eyes and look. “Tell me why I shouldn’t kill you right now,” he said, according to the account she gave the police. After he calmed down, he tossed a knife at her and said, “Just go get in the bathtub and slit your wrist,” she recalled.

    In January 2017, Invictus punched her in the spine, got on top of her and had sex with her “while she just laid there,” she told the police.

    The abuse went on, unreported, for months. In March, the young woman opened her laptop and saw a Google Calendar notification shared from Invictus’ email address, according to the police report. On March 17, there was a reminder to “Annihilate [her first name].” That’s when she decided to go to the police.

    When the detective investigating the case asked Invictus about the calendar notification, he said it alluded to exposing personal information about the woman, rather than causing her any physical injury, said Evelyn Estevez, a spokeswoman for the Altamonte Springs Police Department.

    After the victim went to the police, Invictus threatened defamation lawsuits against her and her friend Alexandria Brown, who had been speaking out about the alleged violence, unless they both formally retracted the allegations. Living in constant fear of retaliation, Brown said her mental stability plummeted. She signed a retraction in April, admitting that she did not witness the violence firsthand, but adding that she had no reason to doubt her friend’s claims. “I wish I hadn’t signed the retraction, because it was used to imply [the victim’s] narrative was fabricated, but I don’t actually have any reason to believe she is lying,” Brown said. The victim never signed a retraction.

    Asked to confirm that the victim never retracted her claims, Invictus said the question was irrelevant. “This is like explaining to a mentally retarded teenager why Santa doesn’t exist,” he wrote in an email. “You are a Jew with an axe to grind against anyone who refuses to denounce the Alt-Right.”

    In April, Invictus’ accuser met with a victim advocate in the Office of the State Attorney for Brevard and Seminole counties, but she couldn’t meet with a prosecutor because the police were still investigating the case, office spokesman Todd Brown told HuffPost.

    In July, the police recommended that charges of domestic battery by strangulation and aggravated battery be filed against Invictus. Then there appears to have been a communication breakdown. Brown, from the State Attorney’s office, told HuffPost that his office mailed the accuser two requests to meet in the fall with a prosecutor. But the young woman, who may not have received the requests, never responded.

    Invictus and his wife continued to deny the allegations of abuse, claiming the accuser was addicted to drugs and trying to smear Invictus’ name. Prosecutors decided they didn’t have enough evidence to convict Invictus and declined to pursue prosecution. “The failure of the victim to cooperate with our office only compounded the existing problem of a lack of evidence,” Brown said.

    When a police officer involved in the case asked the young woman why it took her so long to go to the police, she said she was afraid of Invictus. According to the detective’s report, the victim told the officer that Invictus “has ties to white supremacist individuals and knows everything about her, including where she is living now, her friends and family contact information, and her place of work.”

    He was also, she said, “a ‘high-powered’ attorney.”



    ===========

    Tell Me What To Do, O, Fearless/Dickless/Mindless Leader!!!!
    I Need A Zero!!!!!!


    Comment


    • #17
      Lawfare Victory Opens the Floodgates for the Alt-Kike

      Lawfare Victory Opens the Floodgates for the Alt-Kike


      https://alt-right-news.blogspot.com/...gates-for.html
      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7539#post17539
      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7539#post17539



      Dickie Spencer's Army of beady-eyed 1/8 jew mischling faggots, cum-cum, cum-cum !!!
      .


      The Alt-Right is poised to spread it message to university students across America after a major legal victory secured the right of Richard Spencer to address students at Michigan State University. This overturned an attempted ban by university authorities, afraid of Spencer's ability to point at students while wearing a waistcoat over rolled-up shirt sleeves.

      The decision follows a legal case brought by Alt-Right lawyer Kyle Bristow on behalf of Cameron Padgett, a University of Georgia student, who had requested space at the university for Spencer to have a speaking engagement, as he has done before at other universities like Auburn and the University of Florida.

      According to the decision, Padgett will pay $0 for security, while the university will pay $27,400 to Bristow for attorney’s fees. Spencer is now scheduled to speak at the University on March 5th. Padgett has also requested space at Kent State University's Student Multicultural Center for May 4th, the anniversary of the famous event in 1970, when national guardsmen fired into a crowd of students protesting American military intervention in Cambodia.

      This landmark decision will make it easier for the Alt-Right to spread its invincible ideology and sartorial genius, with an army of Richard Spencer clones now being prepared to roll out the message of the Alt-Right to universities the length and breadth of the land.

      .

      .

      We Survived the Post-Charlottesville Internuts Fuktardocaust

      https://trad-news.blogspot.com/

      Comment


      • #18
        I gots $27.000 in barratry fees, enuf to pay for stamps for Ol' Niggerlips latest bogus lawsuit against Aryan Nations & Stamps for Lawyer Klimkowsky

        I gots $27.000 in barratry fees, enuf to pay for stamps for Ol' Niggerlips latest bogus lawsuit against Aryan Nations & Stamps for Lawyer Klimkowsky

        Muh Law Clerk Ol' Niggerlips pegs me, I peg Dickie & Itz Gay Libberation here at the ZOGbot Poverty Flaw Center, cum-cum, cum-cum!!!




        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7552#post17552
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7552#post17552






        SEXecutive DirecTard of the ZOGbot Poverty [F]Law Center
        & Foundation 4 The MarketPlace of LibberToon jewboy mamzer faggot Notions


        Where we infiltraite jew mischlings & homosexual mamzers as non-white White Supremacists, cum-cum, cum-cum !!!

        http://www.freedomfront.org/board-of-directors/


        ____
        Dickie Spencer, Charlottesville 12 Aug17 _____________________ Bryan Reo, Reo vs Aryan Nations 2015

        Comment


        • #19
          Richard Spencer and 2 others claim they can't find lawyers for Charlottesville defense

          Richard Spencer and 2 others claim they can't find lawyers for Charlottesville defense


          https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/...sville-defense
          http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7624#post17624
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7624#post17624


          Good help can be hard to find.

          Good legal help, when you are a white nationalist, can be even more difficult to come by.

          At least three defendants in the federal civil suit stemming from the deadly “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in August can’t find legal representation.

          Racist “alt-right” frontman Richard Spencer, podcaster Michael “Enoch” Peinovich and the Fraternal Order of the Alt-Knights have each filed a response to the lawsuit on their own, without a lawyer.

          Five other defendants in the lawsuit — Daily Stormer website operator Andrew Anglin and his company, Moonbase Holdings, Austin Gillespie, also known as Augustus Sol Invictus, the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and the East Coast Knights of the Ku Klux Klan — have yet to file any response to the lawsuit.

          The plaintiffs, a group of 13 people hurt or attacked during the rally, seek compensation and punitive damages and ask the courts to intervene with legal orders preventing a repeat of the deadly events that occurred in Charlottesville on August 11 and 12, and barring use of private militias at such events.

          Going without a lawyer isn’t entirely uncommon. The National Center for State Courts, in a 2006 report, found a rise in the number of pro se litigants, particularly in divorce and family cases.

          The Center also noted that defendants in trials with a political orientation tend to participate in the proceedings more than defendants in non-political cases. That’s because they may have greater ability to depart from courtroom norms to speak to about their beliefs and moral issues.

          Kyle “Based Stickman” Chapman of Daly City, California, who filed a response on behalf of the Fraternal Order of Alt-Knights, wrote to U.S. District Judge Norman K. Moon that he was having difficulty finding a lawyer in Virginia.

          Spencer and Peinovich, in their similar legal filings, wrote that they’ve not been able to find legal counsel in Virginia, despite what they called an “ethical obligation” by attorneys to represent unpopular opinions.

          While exploring the issue in some cases, the U.S. Supreme Court has not declared an absolute right to legal representation in all civil cases, unlike criminal proceedings where public defenders can be appointed.

          The choice of self-representation isn’t particularly popular on the alt-right.

          Jason Kessler, the Charlottesville, Virginia, alt-right activist who organized the “Unite the Right” rally, took to Twitter and Gab on Thursday to criticize the decision to go without a lawyer.

          “I don’t think it’s about money,” wrote Kessler, who does have an attorney, Elmer Woodard of Blair, Virginia. “It’s about being so proud that you’d rather sabotage your own legal case, cause & career than say you’re sorry & ask for help. I hate to call people out publicly but this is so stupid it has to be acknowledged.”

          It’s the latest sign of tension between Spencer and Kessler when the rift between the two went public after the rally. Kessler, in a since deleted tweet, insulted 32-year-old Heather Heyer, who was killed when 20-year-old James Alex Fields Jr., drove his car into a crowd, striking her.

          Spencer later conceded that Heyer “did nothing wrong” and called for alt-right adherents to have nothing to do with Kessler.

          Others on social media were critical of the lack of legal representation. A Twitter user known as “Raschan” questioned why attorneys won’t take up Spencer’s case.

          “Tf? Even islamist terrorists get lawyers,” Rashcan wrote. “Not to mention rapists. Do they rather defend rapists than someone who is pro-white?”

          Twitter user Jonah Solomon was less charitable.

          “maybe its because Spencer cant afford one. I don't think peddling hipster white nationalism is all that lucrative,” Solomon wrote on Thursday.

          Neither Spencer nor Peinovich tweeted about their decisions to file pro se or inability to get lawyers.

          Kyle Bristow, a Michigan attorney and white nationalists who has represented Spencer’s racist booking agent in cases against universities across the country, declined to comment when asked if he is assisting Spencer and Peinovich or has sought to help them find legal representation.

          Spencer and Peinovich wrote remarkably similar briefs, citing the same three cases and using similar expressions to describe the lawsuit against them.

          Both cited “lawfare,” a term used to characterize the idea that the courts are being used to bankrupt or shut down unpopular ideas.

          And, both used their responses, filed Tuesday and Wednesday, to call for the lawsuit to be dismissed, saying it lacks merit.

          “Their obvious aim is to try to make at least one claim of wrongdoing stick against at least one person, then destroy every other pro-monument person who attended the demonstration by linking them to the wrongdoer via conspiracy allegations,” Peinovich wrote.

          No hearing has been set on the pro se motions to dismiss.

          .


          Comment


          • #20
            Meet the sadistic metro Detroit lawyer behind next week's alt-right conference

            Meet the sadistic metro Detroit lawyer behind next week's alt-right conference

            Posted By Violet Ikonomova on Thu, Mar 1, 2018 at 3:09 pm



            https://www.metrotimes.com/news-hits...ght-conference
            http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7730#post17730
            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7730#post17730


            White nationalist Richard Spencer owes his upcoming visit to Michigan State University to one man — metro Detroit lawyer Kyle Bristow, a self-described legal advocate for the alt-right.

            Bristow brought a first-amendment legal challenge against MSU after it denied Spencer permission to speak at the campus last year, prompting the school to settle and reverse course. But before Spencer takes the stage Monday in East Lansing, he will visit a secret location in metro Detroit to speak at an alt-right conference put on by Bristow and his "Foundation for the Marketplace of Ideas."

            Nonprofit forms filed by FMI describe Bristow, the group's executive director, as “one of the Alt-Right's most vicious attack dogs." While Bristow did not respond to a request for an interview Thursday, a scroll through his now-protected Twitter account provides some insight into his beliefs: His posts advocate for violence against Mexicans who attempt to illegally cross the border, promote anti-Semitism, and denigrate Africa. Bristow also seems to enjoy comparing himself to Dr. Evil and ridiculing reporters who seek to cover him or his organization.


            ____________________________
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            Comment


            • #21
              Richard Spencer's metro Detroit lawyer dissociates from alt-right following negative press

              Richard Spencer's metro Detroit lawyer dissociates from alt-right following negative press

              Posted By Violet Ikonomova on Sat, Mar 3, 2018 at 4:43 pm


              https://www.metrotimes.com/news-hits...negative-press
              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7738#post17738



              Kyle Bristow, Founder of the ZPLC
              .

              The metro Detroit alt-right legal advocate who cleared the way for Richard Spencer to speak at Michigan State University says he's withdrawing from politics following news stories that highlighted racist statements he's made over the years.

              Kyle Bristow, the executive director of the Foundation for the Market Place of Ideas, announced he would resign from the role in a statement posted to the FMI website Saturday. The Clinton Township-based group is to host an alt-right conference featuring Spencer, Cameron Padgett, and other white nationalists at a secret location in metro Detroit on Sunday, the eve of Spencer's visit to MSU.

              .

              RELATED Meet the sadistic metro Detroit lawyer behind next week's alt-right conference
              .

              ["The media is not whatsoever justified in vilifying me," Bristow says in the letter. "Just as I have stood up for the free speech rights of people on the right side of the political spectrum, I have likewise — in my capacity as an attorney — stood up for the rights of people on the left side of the political spectrum."



              Bristow, 31, also downplayed his racist behavior over the years, saying that much of it occurred a decade ago when he was still in college at MSU. It was there that he served as the head of a chapter of an alleged hate group and organized a "Catch an Illegal Immigrant Day," according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

              Up until recently, however, Bristow was posting racist epithets to Twitter. Pepe the Frog, a cartoon character the alt-right has adopted to denote anti-Semitism, was a mainstay on his feed. He also recently posted a video that suggested Mexicans who attempt to illegally cross into the U.S. be electrocuted.

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              Comment


              • #22
                I'm Pulling The Butt-Plug on Me & Ol' Niggerlip's MarketPlace for the Freedumb of ZOGbots Pretending to be Whigger Supremists, cum-cum, cum-cum !!!

                I'm Pulling The Butt-Plug on Me & Ol' Niggerlip's MarketPlace for the Freedumb of ZOGbots Pretending to be Whigger Supremists, cum-cum, cum-cum !!!


                http://bryanreo-lawsuits.xyz/2017/Di...of%20Ideas.pdf
                http://christian-identity.net/forum/...6436#post16436
                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...6436#post16436


                Resignation of Kyle Bristow

                March 3, 2018

                In recent weeks, journalists have published horrifically disparaging articles about me which contain acerbic, offensive, juvenile, and regrettable statements I mostly made over a decade ago while I was in college and a prominent and staunchly conservative activist, and which juxtaposed these statements with my recent legitimate and meritorious legal advocacy on behalf of people and organizations who espouse political views which happen to be controversial.

                The media is not whatsoever justified in vilifying me. Just as I have stood up for the free speech rights of people on the right side of the political spectrum, I have likewise—in my capacity as an attorney—stood up for the rights of people on the left side of the political spectrum. I take my calling as an attorney seriously and have aggressively represented people from all walks of life: which includes homeless people as well as multimillionaires, people of all races, and people of all sexual orientations. You might be surprised to learn that I once was nearly held in contempt of court for repeatedly demanding that a rural judge from a conservative jurisdiction refer to my client—who was transsexual—on the record by their assigned gender rather than by their biological gender; you might also be surprised to learn that I served as the president of my high school's international club while I was a junior and senior and that when I travel internationally, I try my best to speak the local language (albeit poorly)—which I only point out to show that I have respect for cultures and human dignity and that there is a side to the story which the media is not telling.

                The people who know me best—my friends and family, my current and former clients, former employers, and lawyers and judges with whom I regularly deal—know me as a passionate defender of the law and an aggressive advocate of my clients’ rights. Whether I am demanding the dismissal of an unconstitutional criminal charge against a homeless client who merely held up a sign to request food near a busy street intersection, or I am repeatedly demanding that a rural judge refer to a transsexual client by their assigned gender, or I am providing pro bono legal assistance to poor people who happen to be down on their luck, I do my job and do it as well as I can

                In light of the recent relentless and unjustifiable vilification of me, as well as the mischaracterizations of who I am as a person, I have unilaterally made the decision to provide this clarification and to withdraw from politics. Yesterday, an attorney substituted in for me so as to continue representing Cameron Padgett for his federal lawsuits against the University of Cincinnati and the Ohio State University, and today I deleted my private Twitter profile and now am announcing that I will no longer serve in any capacity with the Foundation for the Marketplace of Ideas, Inc.—which was founded by a number of licensed attorneys and me in 2016 so as to promote the rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution. I will not be in attendance at the upcoming Michigan State University event—which will happen as a result of the recent successful and high-profile lawsuit I filed on behalf of my client—, nor will I attend FMI's upcoming Detroit conference where attendees will merely dine on appetizers and drink beverages from an open bar as they mingle. FMI will be transferred to the control of someone else to manage so its mission can be advanced, or else it will be dissolved.

                In closing, I wish to relay that I abhor violence—of which I have never engaged and have always disavowed—, I regret having previously used language which is needlessly offensive, the characterizations made of me by the media are inaccurate, and I salute everyone who stands up for the rights that are guaranteed by the Constitution—no matter who is exercising those rights.

                Although the media’s vilification of me prompted this statement, I nevertheless believe it is the morally right decision to make as I move forward in life.


                Kyle Bristow


                This is the Board of DirecTards as of March 3, 2018, just before I pulled the Butt-Plug on the ZOGbot Poverty [F]Law Center:
                http://bryanreo-lawsuits.xyz/2017/Di...of%20Ideas.pdf

                http://bryanreo-lawsuits.xyz/2017/Di...-Directors.pdf


                SEXecutive DirecTard of the ZOGbot Poverty [F]Law Center
                & Foundation 4 The MarketPlace of LibberToon jewboy mamzer faggot Notions


                Where we infiltraite jew mischlings & homosexual mamzers as non-white White Supremacists, cum-cum, cum-cum !!!

                http://www.freedomfront.org/board-of-directors/


                ____
                Dickie Spencer, Charlottesville 12 Aug17 _____________________ Bryan Reo, Reo vs Aryan Nations 2015

                Comment


                • #23
                  Alt-right lawyer Kyle Bristow walks away from movement

                  Alt-right lawyer Kyle Bristow walks away from movement

                  Butt he is still gonna cum-cum, cum-cum from going ass-to-mouth with Ol' Niggerlips

                  by Brett Barrouquere, March 5, 2018



                  https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/...-away-movement
                  http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7758#post17758
                  http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7758#post17758
                  .


                  .

                  The alt-right lawyer behind lawsuits against multiple universities says he’s walking away from the racist movement and politics.

                  In a statement posted online Saturday, 31-year-old Kyle Bristow of Clinton Township, Michigan, also said he would give up his position at the head of the Foundation of the Marketplace of Ideas, a think-tank and front for his alt-right political activities.

                  And, Bristow deleted his sometimes incendiary Twitter account, which was known for white nationalist statements, Pepe the Frog memes and insults hurled at detractors.

                  In the statement, Bristow blamed recent media coverage for his decision, saying references to “acerbic, offensive, juvenile and regrettable statements” he made while in college at Michigan State University included in recent profiles of him were unfair.

                  “The media is not whatsoever justified in vilifying me,” Bristow said.

                  The resignation from FMI came as a group of white nationalist planned to gather in Detroit for a meeting where Bristow previously promised fellowship, drinks and karaoke before trekking to East Lansing, Michigan, to hear white nationalist Richard Spencer speak at Michigan State’s agricultural center on Monday.

                  On Twitter, Spencer said his speech in East Lansing is going “full steam ahead.”

                  “I understand the pressure he’s under,” Spencer said in video. “He’s a good person and he’s done a lot of good things for the movement and the broader cause of free speech.”

                  Bristow said he will not attend the speech.

                  Bristow was the legal muscle behind lawsuits brought by Cameron Padgett, a Georgia State University student, who has served as Spencer’s booking agent for his ill-received college speaking tour. He negotiated settlements that allowed Spencer to speak at Texas A&M, the University of Florida — where three people were arrested in a shooting after the speech — and Auburn University.

                  Currently, there are lawsuits pending against Ohio State University, the University of Cincinnati and Penn State University.

                  Attorney James Kolenich, who practices law in the Cincinnati area, filed a substation of counsel notice in all three lawsuits to take over representing Padgett.

                  Bristow said the leadership of FMI will be transferred to someone else, but did not identify a new leader. The group’s website did not note any change in the group’s top officers.

                  Bristow has been politically active since college and wrote “White Apocolypse,” a novel seething with lethal white supremacist revenge fantasies against Jewish people.

                  As an undergraduate, Bristow argued that minority groups shouldn’t be automatically represented in student government, pushed for a “Catch an illegal immigrant day” and led America’s first college-student organization to be listed by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a hate group.


                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Is The Alt-Right Dying? White Supremacist Leaders Report Infighting And Defection

                    Is The Alt-Right Dying? White Supremacist Leaders Report Infighting And Defection


                    http://www.newsweek.com/alt-right-wh...arrests-831491
                    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7759#post17759
                    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7759#post17759


                    The white supremacist, alt-right movement that rose during the presidential campaign of President Donald Trump appears to be splintering.

                    Kyle Bristow, an attorney and key ally to alt-right leader Richard Spencer said this weekend he was dropping out of politics a day before he was slated to host a white nationalism-themed conference in Detroit, Michigan. As this was happening, other key figures in the movement lashed out at one another in a public way, accusing each other in heated terms of sabotaging their efforts to organize.

                    The chaos, defection and infighting shows a political movement mired in turmoil seven and a half months after appearing united at the deadly Unite the Right event in Charlottesville, Virginia.

                    .


                    Dickie & Kylie have shared mangina humidorks, cum-cum, cum-cum!!!
                    .

                    Bristow, a white nationalist lawyer based in Michigan, defected from the movement on Saturday just before his own organization, Foundation for the Marketplace of Ideas, was to hold an event in Detroit on Sunday. The event, which was billed as an opportunity to hash out the direction of the anti-immigrant, anti-Semitic alt-right movement, was cancelled. Spencer, who had been scheduled to attend Bristow’s event ahead of a speaking engagement on Monday at Michigan State University in East Lansing, was forced to hold a small gathering at a private residence as a substitute, he told Newsweek.

                    “I support Kyle in whatever path he chooses to take,” Spencer told Newsweek. “We’re in touch.”

                    Spencer spoke at Michigan State University in front of a sparse crowd of fewer than 50 people on Monday. He didn't address the subject of splintering in his movement, but acknowledged that the alt-right was going through “growing pains.” The meager turnout for Monday’s rally showed a significant decline from rallies the alt-right held as recently as last October, when slightly more than 200 people showed up to a “White Lives Matter” event in Tennessee.

                    .


                    .

                    Bristow represented Spencer in his attempts to give speeches at several colleges throughout the country, and argued successfully to allow his client a chance to speak Monday at Michigan State University, his own alma mater. He was also an integral and unifying figure in the so-called racist right going back for the better part of a decade. Bristow published in 2010 a novel called White Apocalypse, which detailed violent fantasies directed at Jewish people, people of color and characters that eerily resembled staffers at the Southern Poverty Law Center. He also voiced big plans of creating his own rights group, as a way to defend the alt-right movement on grounds of free speech, and was in the middle of raising money on the crowdsourcing site Patreon toward that goal. Bristow did not respond to a request for comment, but he blamed his exit from the movement on journalists in a statement.

                    “In light of the recent relentless and unjustifiable vilification of me, as well as the mischaracterizations of who I am as a person, I have unilaterally made the decision to provide this clarification and to withdraw from politics,” Bristow wrote on Saturday in a parting statement to the alt-right, which was published on his wesbite.

                    Ryan Lenz of the Southern Poverty law Center told Newsweek Monday that Bristow's unexpected departure was significant for the movement in part because it would force Spencer to find new representation to continue his current efforts at galvanizing press attention, which typically occur when protesters mobilize to shut down his speaking engagements. Bristow has bragged in the past that Foundation for the Marketplace of Ideas was the “sword and shield of the Alt-Right.” ​

                    .


                    Matt-oid Chaimbach grabs the microphone & shows itz fat ass to its sundry tards
                    .

                    To be sure, recent turmoil in the alt-right movement has spread beyond Spencer's inner circle. Daily Stormer, a neo-Nazi website that once served as the de facto homepage for young white supremacists, was uncharacteristically silent Monday about Spencer’s speaking appearance at Michigan State University. When Spencer spoke at the University of Florida in October, in contrast, the website promoted that event. The shift may have something to do with Spencer’s recent alignment with the Traditionalist Worker’s Party, a small, neo-Nazi group that has become a regular fixture at alt-right protests throughout the country over the last few years.

                    Andrew Anglin, Daily Stormer’s editor, sniped publically at Matt Heimbach, the leader of the Traditionalist Worker’s Party, calling him a “good-natured but socially awkward fat kid” on a popular alt-right forum on Saturday, while denouncing his influence as a leader. Anglin, and his colleague, Andrew “Weev” Auernheimer, took turns ridiculing the presentation of Traditionalist Worker’s Party rallies, suggesting their uniforms and “communist” rhetoric were discouraging people from aligning with their cause.

                    “Everyone in the alt-right is a malignant contrarian,” Lenz said about the growing divisions in their movement following the united front the alt-right displayed in Charlottesville. “They come from a culture where insults are the coin of the realm.”

                    Anglin and Auernheimer were in turn criticized in a public way on the same forum throughout Saturday and Sunday for linking the alt-right to overt neo-Nazism, violence and misogyny. Auernheimer has publically praised Atomwaffen, for example, a neo-Nazi group linked to a string of brutal murders, a move that has caused embarrassment to Traditionalist Worker’s Party and members of the “Southern Nationalist” outfit League of the South, two groups that marched in Charlottesville last August. Anglin has spoken in sadistic terms about white women, going so far as to celebrate the idea of them being raped and physically abused.

                    Daily Stormer are “hypocrites who are clinging to failed reactionary politics,” Heimbach told Newsweek on Monday about the public collapse into infighting.

                    .


                    ____________________________
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                    Comment


                    • #25
                      The ‘sword and shield’ of white supremacists buckles under pressure

                      The ‘sword and shield’ of white supremacists buckles under pressure

                      After a few critical articles, white supremacist lawyer Kyle Bristow decides to quit the movement.

                      They shut down the ZOGbot Poverty [F]Law Center & Put Ol' Niggerlips out of work propounding cum-cum cum-cum novel lawfare strategies

                      CASEY MICHEL
                      MAR 6, 2018, 6:22 PM



                      https://thinkprogress.org/richard-sp...-1b88182293d7/
                      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7763#post17763
                      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7763#post17763



                      1/8 mischling jewboy faggot Dickie Spencer -- Itz ZOGtards hath abandoned Dickie
                      .

                      It turns out the “sword and shield” for young white supremacists isn’t worth much.

                      Kyle Bristow, a lawyer who had been an outspoken legal advocate for white supremacists and a close associate of Richard Spencer, announced over the weekend that he’d no longer be affiliating with white supremacists. According to Bristow, he is leaving the Foundation for the Marketplace of Ideas (FMI), a group he founded in 2016 and one that, in his words, had “aggressively established itself as the sword and shield” of young white supremacists.

                      But after the Detroit Free Press dove into Bristow’s background — including his past work as leader of the “first college-student organization to be listed as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center” — Bristow apparently couldn’t stand the criticism.

                      In a long, rambling statement, Bristow criticized media coverage of his work. He wrote that “journalists have published horrifically disparaging articles about me which contain acerbic, offensive, juvenile, and regrettable statements I mostly made over a decade ago while I was in college.” Due to the “unjustifiable vilification,” Bristow announced that he would be “withdraw[ing] from politics.”

                      Bristow didn’t specify which bits of media coverage he took issue with, but he was never shy about his previous white supremacist leanings. While working at FMI — which he claimed was a white supremacist “version of the SPLC,” and which included white supremacists like Spencer and Mike Enoch as board members — the group published multiple guides for white supremacists, including for white supremacist “guerilla activists.” One FMI post called on readers to “Hail Richard Spencer!”

                      And while he’s since deleted his Twitter feed, Bristow, according to Internet Archive, had used his account to describe white supremacy as “freedom for our people” and a “cause… being heard around the world.” In his work, he’d become the “go-to attorney for a growing cast of racists — young and old,” wrote the SPLC.

                      It’s unclear how Bristow’s ignominious resignation will affect Spencer’s future. But given that only a few dozen turned out for Spencer’s recent appearance in Michigan, it’s clear he has more issues than just losing allies suddenly threatening his relevance.

                      .

                      ____________________________
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                      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
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                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Fox News article on Stormy Daniels cites known white supremacist as a legal expert

                        Fox News article on Stormy Daniels cites known white supremacist as a legal expert

                        Fox went to Kyle Bristow, formerly an attorney for the “alt-right,” for his legal expertise

                        Blog ››› March 29, 2018 10:35 AM EDT ››› CRISTINA LóPEZ G.



                        https://www.mediamatters.org/blog/20...-expert/219777
                        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7876#post17876
                        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7876#post17876



                        There ain't no photo in which even sans Dickie Spencer or Ol' Niggerlips in which Kyle Bristow, Esquirrel, don't look non-faggy
                        .

                        Fox News is helping white supremacist Kyle Bristow rehabilitate his white nationalist past by citing him for legal expertise without disclosing Bristow’s racist views, his active role in institutionalizing the “alt-right,” or his recent legal representation of white nationalist Richard Spencer. Bristow’s extremist background should have been clear to the network, as a February Fox story named him as Spencer’s attorney.

                        In a March 26 FoxNews.com story claiming Stormy Daniels’ lawyer could have implicated himself and his client in a potential crime, Fox included Bristow among the legal experts the network contacted for commentary. Bristow later bragged about his quotes on his Facebook page. From the FoxNews.com report:


                        Originally posted by Faux Snooze
                        .
                        .
                        .

                        As recently as early March, Bristow was not only Richard Spencer's attorney, but also an important actor developing institutions for the “alt-right.” During an earlier guest appearance on the white nationalist propaganda outlet Red Ice TV, he talked about the organization he had founded, the Foundation for the Marketplace of Ideas (FMI), which he called “our” -- referring to the “alt-right” -- “own version of the ACLU.” As reported by the blog Angry White Men, Bristow intended to use FMI to force universities to host white nationalists and allow them to spread their racist ideas via public speaking events.

                        Bristow’s history of extremism also includes publishing a novel the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) described as “seething with lethal white supremacist revenge fantasies against Jewish professors, Latino and American Indian activists and staffers of a group clearly modeled on the SPLC,” and which his ex-wife called “his personal manifesto.” His second book got an endorsement from prominent white nationalist Jared Taylor. Bristow also represented both Spencer and Cameron Padgett, the prominent white nationalist's “booking agent and legal advocate,” in multiple lawsuits against universities, claiming Spencer’s right to free speech was being violated when public universities -- citing security costs -- made it difficult for him to spread his extremism on campus. Bristow's ideological extremism led The Daily Beast’s Mark Potok to describe him as “a hardline racist.”

                        A day before he was supposed to host a white nationalist-themed conference in Detroit, MI, this month, Bristow announced he was “dropping out of politics” and giving up his position at the helm of FMI. He blamed recent media coverage for his decision, complaining about “recent relentless and unjustifiable vilification” and explaining, “In recent weeks, journalists have published horrifically disparaging articles about me which contain acerbic, offensive, juvenile and regrettable statements I mostly made over a decade ago.” He didn't clarify whether he would still represent Spencer, but the two seemed to remain on good terms, with Spencer referring to Bristow warmly in a March 3 Periscope recording and telling Newsweek the two were “in touch.” Shortly after Bristow’s resignation, his Twitter account -- which used to house his incendiary commentary -- and his foundation’s online presence were scrubbed from the internet.

                        Fox News has previously, if indirectly, acknowledged Bristow's connections to the “alt-right,” as a February 11 story covering Spencer and threats he made about suing Kent State University cited Bristow as Spencer's lawyer:

                        .

                        Originally posted by Faux Snooze
                        .
                        .
                        .

                        Either Fox is willingly aiding this white supremacist in scrubbing his “alt-right” extremist past or, at best, the network is inept at vetting the people it goes to for expertise. Neither is a good look.
                        .

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                        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
                        http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          I'm just a pore jewboy ZOGbot needing ZOGbux for muh ZOGfuktardation

                          I'm just a pore jewboy ZOGbot needing ZOGbux for muh ZOGfuktardation


                          https://www.fundedjustice.com/Spence...idKAYNAMGazidK
                          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8017#post18017



                          My name is Richard Spencer. I'm a jew mischling ZOGbot writer, publisher, and activist. I've been attacked, banned from multiple countries, and jailed for my views. I'm now facing the most potentially damaging challenge yet.

                          Civil Action No. 3:17-cv-00072-NKM

                          I’m under attack. And I need your help.

                          Some of the biggest, baddest law firms in the country are suing me, along with other prominent figures, in civil court (Civil Action No. 3:17-cv-00072-NKM). They are going after those who organized—or, in my case, attended—the Unite The Right rally on August 12 in Charlottesville, Virginia.

                          We shouldn’t underestimate the challenge of this lawsuit—and future ones like it. This is warfare by legal means, designed to be debilitating and consuming, regardless of the facts and regardless of the ultimate judgement.

                          The other side includes powerful firms like Cooley and Boies Schiller Flexner, as well as activist Roberta Kaplan and Karen Dunn; the latter was a former associate counsel to Barak Obama and was reported to be one of Hillary Clinton’s choices for general counsel. The Plaintiffs have not yet revealed the damages they are seeking, but we can only assume they will be substantial.

                          The good news is that the Plaintiff’s case is rather absurd and deserves to be dismissed—particularly in my case. No criminal charges against me for anything related to Charlottesville have been filed; indeed, no plausible criminal accusations have been made. The Plaintiffs’ argument is a “conspiracy theory” in the true sense of the word—that the Charlottesville rally was my secret plan to inspire violence.

                          The reality is that this mockery of justice is an example of “lawfare”—an attempt to use the justice system for personal destruction and political ends.

                          Put simply, they want to shut us down.

                          As Roberta Kaplan (unwisely) confessed on a Washington Post podcast, the purpose of the suit is to ensure that identitarian activists are intimidated from holding public events. How better than to take down Alt-Right’s most widely recognized activist. And we must be realistic. Lawfare like this will not stop with Charlottesville. Our adversaries don’t just want to stop large public rallies; they will likely ultimately go after any expression of White identity, or really any expression that challenges hegemonic discourse.

                          Knowing what the Plaintiffs are trying to accomplish, my strategy, up to this point, has been to defend myself pro se. I have invested my own time and energy, but not depleted funds.

                          It is now time for me to lawyer-up. And I’m asking for your help.

                          As has been reported, I had a terribly difficult time finding a proper representative—someone who is licensed in Virginia, adequate for the job, and willing to represent one of the most controversial men in the country (namely, me).

                          I have now found such a man. And I have already begun the initial engagement with my own funds. I’m raising $25,000 for him to represent me at the trial (and beyond if necessary).

                          A May 24 deadline approaches, when Judge Norman Moon will hear the various motions to dismiss. I want my lawyer to speak on my behalf.

                          Your contribution is not a donation to The National Policy Institute, or any other organization I’m involved with, nor is it a personal gift that I could use at my discretion. One hundred percent of the funds (minus the fees, of course) will be used for my legal defense. And I will document this for contributors. If the case is dismissed (which is certainly possible), the money will be saved for future legal defense on my behalf.

                          I will not abandon our cause. I will continue to be outspoken and bold. We have to win this right here and right now. We cannot let the precedent be set that dissidents can be financially destroyed if enough well-connected and influential lawyers and activists deem it desirable.

                          Throughout my career, I’ve only raised money for institutions and projects that raise consciousness and bring new ideas to the mainstream. Today, however, I’m calling on you for help. I’m being attacked by powerful people, and we must respond. Losing this case would be catastrophic—particularly when we the truth is on our side.

                          With gratitude,

                          Richard Dickie Spencer
                          1/8 jew independently wealthy closeted-homosexual mischling ZOGbot



                          P.S. If you would like to donate by crypto currency, my Bitcoin address is:

                          17weovvcSuHMBmQLdWTc5Lt3jEEDm2q44f


                          Richard "Dickie" Spencer -- 1/8 jewboy & 80% ZOGbot faggot?

                          http://altright.com/



                          https://spencergate.wordpress.com/20...cer-cryptojew/

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Trust-Fund 1/8 jewboy faggot mischling Dickie Spencer needs you whigga-boyz sheckels now to buy him a full jew lawyer or 666

                            Trust-Fund 1/8 jewboy faggot mischling Dickie Spencer needs you whigga-boyz sheckels now to buy him a full jew lawyer or 666


                            https://trad-news.blogspot.com/2018/...r-shekels.html
                            http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8031#post18031
                            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8031#post18031



                            Trust-Fund 1/8 jewboy faggot mischling Dickie Spencer needs you whigga-boyz sheckels now !!!
                            .

                            Richard Spencer, the founder of the Alt-Right, who became notorious by associating the movement with race-baiting hate sites like TRS and the Daily Stormer, has appealed to the movement's army of generous donors to cough up more money for a legal defence fund, which he promises won't be spent on expensive skiing holidays or attempts to get banned from yet more European countries.

                            The appeal is a response to a civil action brought against Spencer and other participants in the Charlottesville "Unite the Right" rally that resulted in attacks on nationalists by antifa and an incident where an Alt-Right sympathiser drove a car into a crowd of people after his car was attacked by Leftists demonstrators.

                            Because of the evident bias in the media and the legal system, Spencer is worried that he might be fined a substantial amount and could be forced to break into his own immense fortune.

                            Spencer's known assets include a third share in a 5,200-acre agricultural estate in Louisiana, worth an estimated $28 million dollars. This estimate is based on the value of the Hollybrook Plantation, a 10,464 acre farm in northeast Louisiana that was recently put on the market for $55 million.

                            With other assumed assets, such as his collection of suits, tubs of hair wax, Bond movie box sets, and rare Depeche Mode memorabilia, Spencer's net worth can be conservatively estimated at around $10 million and possibly much more.

                            The money that he hopes to raise from the appeal will be used to pay for a very expensive -- and therefore good -- lawyer to nip this civil suit in the bud.

                            To switch from purely factual reporting to editorialising just a little, we at Trad News believe that all believers in free speech should support this campaign generously, including Spencer himself.

                            .

                            .


                            We Survived the Post-Charlottesville Internuts Fuktardocaust

                            https://trad-news.blogspot.com/

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Ward Kendall: Dickie Spencer is like Don Black -- Dickie has more than enough ZOGbux to pay for his own stupidity

                              Ward Kendall: Dickie Spencer is like Don Black -- Dickie has more than enough ZOGbux to pay for his own stupidity


                              https://trad-news.blogspot.com/2018/...70281187875245
                              http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8041#post18041
                              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8041#post18041


                              If Spencer's attorney only requires $25 thousand (up front) that's a mere pittance for Spencer. Is this not a fee he can meet himself without fundraising? In my opinion, I think a more honorable approach would be for Richard Spencer to put up at least $100 thousand of his own money, and if that falls short then make a fundraising appeal. I guess the way I see it is that it seems inappropriate for a millionaire to be asking common people to pay his attorney's fees, especially knowing what pieces of shit most attorneys are. This is not to say that I believe Spencer is in the wrong here regarding the lawsuit. On the contrary, I believe he is innocent of all charges. Nevertheless, his request for funds smacks too much of Stormfront's Don Black, who was constantly conning people to support his "lifestyle" under the guise of needing seven thousand five hundred dollars per month to run his forum. In my view, Spencer should foot the bill for his own legal bills, especially when one considers all the other other Charlottesville WN's now on trial who aren't receiving supporter-funded attorneys. What about them? Unlike Spencer, they're not rich. Nor do I hear Spencer making any appeal to help them. They're on their own, and Spencer should be left to fend for himself as well.

                              "Hold Back This Day" - What Would The World Be Like If Whites Were Driven To The Edge of Extinction? - an amazon novel

                              "Eternity Beach" - An Epic Alt-Right Novel Unlike Any You Have Ever Read - an amazon novel

                              Would government internment camps for the homeless, chronically-unemployed, and socially derelict ever be a viable option, if it were humane? You decide, after reading "The Towers of Eden" - an amazon novel

                              .


                              I'm Little Butt I'm Loud!!!

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Go-Daddy Destroys Its "Free-Speach" Credibility by Shutting Down Spencer's Site

                                Go-Daddy Destroys Its "Free-Speach" Credibility by Shutting Down Spencer's Site


                                https://trad-news.blogspot.com/2018/...ee-speech.html
                                http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8059#post18059
                                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8059#post18059



                                Cry Me A River, Mischling Dickie Spencer
                                .

                                GoDaddy, the internet services provider, has gone and shut down Richard Spencer's AltRight.com site...

                                Forgive my tears, but AltRight.com used to be one of my favourite sites -- although I'm sure it will be back in some form or other.

                                Anyway, Go Daddy was also the domain registrar for Andrew Anglin's Daily Stormer site, which they shut down back in August last year following Charlottesville. This followed an ill-timed article mocking the overweight leftist woman who tragically died in the aftermath of the Unite the Right rally.

                                That fact alone should have warned Spencer to switch his domain from GoDaddy to somewhere else, anywhere else. But he failed to see the danger, probably assuming that he was too handsome and his content too polite and civilised to be shut down in this crude, plebian way.

                                The decision to shut down the site came after Kristen Clarke, the President and Executive Director of the Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, wrote to GoDaddy CEO Scott Wagner, unfairly characterising Spencer's site as a hate site that promoted violence.

                                .


                                She-boon lawyeress doesn't like Whigger Supremacist Web Sites or White Speech
                                .

                                "A little bit of lawlessness and savagery in the ranks of border patrol should be encouraged (you see this in Bulgaria and Russia where private citizens and militia do much of the border patrolling, far more effectively I surmise). They are not afraid to dole out a little bit of punishment to their would-be conquerors (megalomaniacal Muhammadens). One of the West’s primary problems is that we have become too law-centered, too law-abiding. Superiors would do well to turn their heads to a little bit of brutality and vengeance by our guys on the border, perhaps even tolerating a massacre here or there."
                                .

                                OK, this is obviously a bit retarded, and reflects Spencer's deep psychological need -- as a soft, pampered frat boy from a rich landowning family -- to LARP hard as a paramilitary hard man from time to time by publishing rubbish like this.
                                .


                                Dickie Spencer the 1/8 jew mischling made the Alt-Kike pretty faggy, cum-cum, cum-cum !!!
                                .

                                But it is hard to see how a company like GoDaddy, which, as an act of business necessity, has a commitment to a policy of free speech, could shut down Spencer's site on this flimsy basis.

                                I mean the article is not actually inciting AltRight.com's readership to take up the "border jumper whack-a-mole challenge." Rather, it is stupidly recommending violence as a kind of hidden "Deep State" policy, carried out by law enforcement professionals with the approval of the President. It may as well be about spaceships made of spider's webs...

                                By taking this decision, GoDaddy's CEO is basically signalling that almost any site which relies on GoDaddy's services could be arbitrarily taken down at any time. It will be interesting to see how this impacts on GoDaddy's share price in the days to come.

                                Another feature of Kristen Clarke's letter is that she also cited AltRight.com's notoriously unmoderated comment boards as a reason for removing the site.

                                This is an interesting precedent, as it means that anyone can leave a violent or abusive comment on a site and then complain that the site is promoting "hatred" and "violence," and then expect GoDaddy to remove their domain name from the register. This is effectively a troll's charter.

                                Under those circumstances, only a complete fool would bother using GoDaddy's services, and only an utter moron would bother investing in them.

                                .

                                .

                                We Survived the Post-Charlottesville Internuts Fuktardocaust

                                https://trad-news.blogspot.com/

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