Los Angeles Times

Publisher, Holocaust denier

WILLIS CARTO, 1926 - 2015

- By David Colker david.colker@latimes.com

Willis Carto, a proponent of far right-wing causes who published books and other publicatio­ns that called the Holocaust a “hoax,” died Oct. 26 at his home in Virginia. He was 89.

His death was announced by a newspaper he helped found, the American Free Press, and confirmed by his wife, Elizabeth, who said he died of heart failure.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks extremist organizati­ons, described Carto as a “white nationalis­t” who espoused “pro-Nazi and rabidly anti-Jewish views.”

He was a major figure in the socalled Holocaust revisionis­t movement that claimed many of the factual details concerning the Nazi exterminat­ion of Jews during World War II were not true, and he helped organize conference­s on the topic.

“He tried to take the movement from the gutter to a higher plane to make it seem like it was legitimate,” said historian Deborah Lipstadt, an Emory University professor and author of several books, including “Denying the Holocaust” (1993). “He tried to dress up the movement in respectabl­e clothes,” she said, “when in reality it was nothing but hate.”

Carto was involved in numerous court actions, including a highly publicized case in Southern California.

The Torrance-based Institute for Historical Review, closely associated with Carto, claimed that poison gas was not used to kill Jews in concentrat­ion camps during World War II. In 1979 it went so far as to offer $50,000 to the first person who could prove that Jews were gassed in the Auschwitz concentrat­ion camp.

Auschwitz survivor Mel Mermelstei­n, a Long Beach businessma­n whose mother and two sisters were killed in the camp’s gas chambers, took up the challenge.

When the organizati­on refused to pay up in the face of his documentat­ion, he sued, naming Carto and the institute among the defendants.

Not long before the matter was to go to trial in 1985, the defendants settled, agreeing not only to pay Mermelstei­n nearly twice the award but also to make a public apology that was entered into the court record.

The case was made into a 1991 television movie, “Never Forget,” with Leonard Nimoy as Mermelstei­n.

In 1993 Carto had an acrimoniou­s break with the institute, now based in Orange County. The organizati­on’s current director, Mark Weber, declined to comment on the record, saying a court settlement between the institute and Carto prohibited it.

Carto was born on July 19, 1926, in Fort Wayne, Indi. Other organizati­ons with which he was involved included the Liberty Lobby and Barnes Review.

He is survived by his wife.

 ??  ?? FAR RIGHT-WING CAUSES The Southern Poverty Law Center described Carto as a “white nationalis­t” who espoused “pro-Nazi and rabidly anti-Jewish views.”
FAR RIGHT-WING CAUSES The Southern Poverty Law Center described Carto as a “white nationalis­t” who espoused “pro-Nazi and rabidly anti-Jewish views.”

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