Los Angeles Times

White nationalis­t fliers rattle 2 towns in O.C.

KKK packet, plans for White Lives Matter rally alarm residents, put officials on alert.

- By Sara Cardine, Andrew Turner and Matt Szabo Cardine, Turner and Szabo write for Times Community News.

Ku Klux Klan propaganda discovered outside homes in Newport Beach and a flier announcing plans for a White Lives Matter rally in Huntington Beach have put local city officials on alert regarding potentiall­y escalating white nationalis­t sentiment.

Residents living on one street in Newport Heights were surprised Sunday morning to find their lawns and driveways littered with apparent recruitmen­t propaganda urging citizens to join the fight for the white race by learning more about the KKK.

Fliers with images of a white-robed Klansman and Confederat­e flags reading “Loyal White Knights Want You to Say No to Cultural Genocide” and promoting a Klan radio show were discovered by a group of homeowners on San Bernardino Avenue early Sunday.

One neighbor, who asked not to be identified for fear of backlash, said she notified the Newport Beach Police Department after a surveillan­ce camera at her home showed a pickup truck driving down her street at 2:24 a.m. Sunday, ostensibly delivering the materials.

“There was nothing when the pickup started to pass the house, but afterward the package was there,” she said.

“There’s a lot of hate, and the hate is pretty horrible,” the woman continued, recounting how some neighbors professed having no problem with the content of the fliers. “Newport Beach needs help — Orange County needs help.”

Newport Beach police spokeswoma­n Heather Rangel on Tuesday confirmed at least one resident had reported the incident and said the department was investigat­ing the matter. She was unable to clarify whether the incident constitute­d a hate crime, although no overt criminal acts seem to have been committed.

Mayor Brad Avery said Tuesday that he and other city officials were disappoint­ed to learn of hatebased activity in the community and were looking into it.

“Unfortunat­ely, this is a common tactic used by some hate groups today,” Avery said in a statement. “We condemn the group’s ideology and assure our residents that the Newport Beach Police Department is actively investigat­ing to determine the individual or group responsibl­e for distributi­ng these materials.”

As news of the Newport Beach discovery spread on social media, word began circulatin­g about a White Lives Matter rally being tentativel­y planned for the afternoon of April 11 at the Huntington Beach Pier.

“We will be planning the WLM rally in Orange County in solidarity with Americans all over the nation on 4/11,” the notice read, encouragin­g participan­ts to wear face masks for anonymity. “Send this channel to all patriots in SoCal who will stand against anti-White racism and violence.”

Huntington Beach interim Police Chief Julian Harvey said the department learned Monday of a possible demonstrat­ion being planned for the pier and was gathering details on the event.

Mayor Kim Carr said the idea of a possible White Lives Matter rally at the pier was unacceptab­le.

“These protests are not indicative of our community,” she said. “We don’t stand for hate. We’re a welcoming community. We embrace everyone, and to have these continued rallies, this one in particular, is truly offensive. I’m all for the 1st Amendment, but I think too many people hide behind the 1st Amendment to promote hate speech.”

Chuck Tanner is a Seattle-based research director for the Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights, which examines racist, anti-Semitic and far-right social movements for the purpose of protecting human rights.

The institute learned last week about a series of White Lives Matter rallies being planned across the nation for April 11 and said some of the groups affiliated with the organizati­on of the demonstrat­ions have deep roots in extreme white radicalism.

“White Lives Matter runs the gamut, from people who know how to clean it up a bit better down to people who are touting Nazi symbols,” Tanner said.

The woman who called Newport Beach police about the fliers in her yard said the city should call on residents to pledge an oath that hate speech and activities will not be tolerated. “If the people at the top won’t denounce [hate] and they won’t take action, it’s going to stay the way it is and the way it has been for decades,” she said.

 ?? Don Leach Daily Pilot ?? A FLIER promoting the KKK was found on the lawn of an unoccupied home in Newport Heights this week.
Don Leach Daily Pilot A FLIER promoting the KKK was found on the lawn of an unoccupied home in Newport Heights this week.

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