White supremacists and militias have infiltrated
police across US, report says
A former FBI agent has documented links between
serving officers and racist militant activities in more than a dozen states
Sam Levin
in Los Angeles
@SamTLevin
Email
Thu 27 Aug
2020 15.13 BSTLast modified on Thu 27 Aug 2020 20.13 BST
White
supremacist groups have infiltrated US law enforcement agencies in every region
of the country over the last two decades, according to a new report about the
ties between police and far-right vigilante groups.
In a timely
new analysis, Michael German, a former FBI special agent who has written
extensively on the ways that US law enforcement have failed to respond to
far-right domestic terror threats, concludes that US law enforcement officials
have been tied to racist militant activities in more than a dozen states since
2000, and hundreds of police officers have been caught posting racist and
bigoted social media content.
The report
notes that over the years, police links to militias and white supremacist
groups have been uncovered in states including Alabama, California,
Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Oklahoma,
Oregon, Texas, Virginia, Washington and West Virginia.
Police in
Sacramento, California, in 2018 worked with neo-Nazis to pursue charges against
anti-racist activists, including some who had been stabbed, according to
records.
And just
this summer, German writes, an Orange county sheriff’s deputy and a Chicago
policeman were caught wearing far-right militia logos; an Olympia, Washington,
officer was photographed posing with a militia group; and Philadelphia police
officers were filmed standing by while armed mobs attacked protesters and
journalists.
The exact
scale of ties between law enforcement and militias is hard to determine, German
told the Guardian. “Nobody is collecting the data and nobody is actively
looking for these law enforcement officers,” he said.
Officers’
racist activities are often known within their departments and generally result
in punishment or termination following public scandals, the report notes. Few
police agencies have explicit policies against affiliating with white
supremacist groups. If police officers are disciplined, the measures often lead
to protracted litigation.
Concerns
about alleged relations between far-right groups and law enforcement in the US
have intensified since the start of the protest movement sparked by the police
killing of George Floyd. Police in states including California, Oregon,
Illinois and Washington are now facing investigations for their alleged
affinity to far-right groups opposing Black Lives Matter, according to the
report.
This week,
police in Kenosha, Wisconsin, faced intense scrutiny over their response to
armed white men and militia groups gathered in the city amid demonstrations by
Black Lives Matter activists and others over the police shooting of Jacob
Blake, a Black father of three who was left paralyzed after being shot in the
back. On Wednesday, Kyle Rittenhouse, a 17-year-old who appeared to consider
himself a militia member and had posted “blue lives matter” content, was
arrested on suspicion of murder after the fatal shooting of two protesters.
Activists
in Kenosha say police there have responded aggressively and violently to Black
Lives Matter demonstrators, while doing little to stop armed white vigilantes.
Supporting their claims is at least one video taken before the shooting that
showed police tossing bottled water to what appeared to be armed civilians,
including one who appeared to be the shooter, the AP noted: “We appreciate you
being here,” an officer said on loudspeaker.
Police also
reportedly let the gunman walk past them with a rifle as the crowd yelled for
him to be arrested because he had shot people, according to witnesses and video
reviewed by the news agency.
The Kenosha
sheriff, David Beth, has said the incident was chaotic and stressful.
German told
the Guardian on Wednesday: “Far-right militants are allowed to engage in
violence and walk away while protesters are met with violent police actions.”
This “negligent response”, he added, empowers violent groups in dangerous and
potentially lethal ways: “The most violent elements within these far-right
militant groups believe that their conduct is sanctioned by the government. And
therefore they’re much more willing to come out and engage in acts of violence
against protesters.”
There is
growing awareness in some parts of the government about the intensifying threat
of white supremacy. The FBI and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have
directly identified white supremacists as the most lethal domestic terrorist
threat in the country. According to German’s report, the FBI’s own internal
documents have directly warned that the militia groups the agency is
investigating often have “active links” to law enforcement.
And yet US
agencies lack a national strategy to identify white supremacist police and root
out this problem, German warned. Meanwhile, popular police reform efforts to
address “implicit bias” have done nothing to confront explicit racism.
The FBI did
not immediately respond to a request for comment.
As the
calls to defund police have grown in recent months, law enforcement alignment
with violent and racist groups only adds further fuel to the movement, German
said. “In a time when the effort to defund police is getting some salience, the
police are behaving in such a way as to justify that argument.”
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