Chicago Sun-Times

White nationalis­t stickers found lining route of S. Side Irish Parade

- BY TOM SCHUBA, DIGITAL CONTENT PRODUCER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

Stickers advertisin­g a white nationalis­t hate group were found along the route of Sunday’s South Side Irish Parade, according to Ald. Matt O’Shea (19th).

On Monday morning, O’Shea learned through social media posts that stickers for the American Identity Movement had been found on up to 20 light posts on Western Avenue between 99th and 119th streets.

The American Identity Movement is a renamed version of Identity Evropa, an establishe­d white nationalis­t group that helped organize the Unite the Right rally in 2017 in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. Identity Evropa has been identified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which noted in a blog post this month that the group had been rebranded as the American Identity Movement.

“The racist and anti-Semitic positions espoused by this organizati­on do not reflect the values and character of our community,” O’Shea said in a letter emailed to constituen­ts. “We must forcefully speak out against this hatred and counter it with our own message of unity.”

O’Shea said he contacted a list of city agencies about the stickers — including Chicago Police, the Department of Streets and Sanitation and the Commission on Human Relations.

“When I contacted all department­s, no one was aware of this,” O’Shea told the Sun-Times.

CPD spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the department was now aware of the stickers but had not received any formal reports or opened an investigat­ion. O’Shea said he would push for a criminal investigat­ion.

The stickers mostly include the group’s name and website and are emblazoned with seemingly patriotic imagery, like bald eagles and stars and stripes. One of the stickers urges readers to “EMBRACE YOUR IDENTITY,” while another calls for “NATIONALIS­M NOT GLOBALISM.”

Republican Art Jones, a Holocaust denier and activist antiSemite, tallied 25 percent of the vote when he lost out to incumbent Democrat Dan Lipinski in the 3rd Congressio­nal District race in November. Jones’ strongest showing in Chicago came in parts of the Mount Greenwood neighborho­od in the 19th Ward, where he scored nearly 40 percent of the vote in two precincts. O’Shea said 19th Ward residents likely backed Jones because he was a Republican, noting that his ward includes many rightleani­ng voters.

O’Shea claimed the sticker campaign appears to have targeted “integrated communitie­s like Beverly and Morgan Park.”

Similar propaganda popped up last year in the West Loop and the western suburbs. In February, Oak Park police ordered five men to take down an Identity Evropa banner they hung on an overpass facing Interstate 290, according to CBS 2. The banner featured skulls and warned, “Danger: Sanctuary City Ahead.”

“We live in a safe community. We call them out for being cowards and spreading hate,” said O’Shea, who is inviting residents to pick up a “Hate Has No Home in the 19th Ward” sign from his ward office at 10400 S. Western.

During the Unite the Right event, members of Identity Evropa and other white nationalis­t groups marched through Charlottes­ville shouting racist slogans and carrying torches before instigatin­g violent clashes with counter-protesters. The event turned deadly when self-avowed white supremacis­t James Alex Fields Jr. rammed his car into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring 40 others. Identity Evropa and the group’s former leader Eli Mosley are both being sued over the rally, the SPLC said.

Identity Evropa members have actively targeted college students in the Chicago area in the past. Over a two-week span in early 2017, multiple Identity Evropa posters were found scattered around the University of Chicago campus, according to DNA Info.

In August, University of Chicago professor Geoffrey Stone rejected university graduate turned reputed neo-Nazi Richard Spencer’s request to return to the school’s campus, the Chicago Maroon reported. According to the SPLC, Mosley has been a “regular presence” at Spencer’s other speaking engagement­s at colleges.

 ?? PROVIDED PHOTO/ALD. MATT O’SHEA ?? A sticker for the American Identity Movement, a documented white nationalis­t group, was seen on a light pole on Western Avenue on the Far South Side.
PROVIDED PHOTO/ALD. MATT O’SHEA A sticker for the American Identity Movement, a documented white nationalis­t group, was seen on a light pole on Western Avenue on the Far South Side.
 ?? PROVIDED/ALD. MATT O’SHEA ?? White nationalis­t posters found Sunday near the route of the South Side Irish Parade.
PROVIDED/ALD. MATT O’SHEA White nationalis­t posters found Sunday near the route of the South Side Irish Parade.

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