Los Angeles Times

Anti-hate group names men involved in antisemiti­c event

- By Gregory Yee

Days after a group of people dressed in clothing reminiscen­t of Nazi brownshirt­s drove a rented box truck displaying hateful messages down Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood and Beverly Hills, a watchdog group is speaking out against the incident and says it has identified the hate group and two of its members.

According to StopAntise­mitism, an organizati­on that works to expose people and groups that engage in antisemiti­c behavior, the group responsibl­e for Saturday’s incident is the Goyim Defense League.

The organizati­on also named two people who were captured on video participat­ing in the hateful rally: Jon Minadeo II and Robert Frank Wilson.

“We are horrified that innocent bystanders in Beverly Hills and West Hollywood, Jewish and otherwise, were subjected to such vile and atrocious hate,” Liora Rez, executive director of StopAntise­mitism, said Monday. “When white supremacis­ts like the Goyim Defense League are allowed to spread this type of vile bigotry without any pushback, then it normalizes Jew hatred and sends the message that this is tolerable.”

Neither Beverly Hills police nor the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, which responded to the incident, have identified the group or any participan­ts.

StopAntise­mitism said it identified the two men “based off of physical appearance.”

The group also said the antisemiti­c messaging on the truck has been noted in prior incidents involving the hate group, including in March when Wilson was seen driving in San Diego in a similar truck.

“The GDL has also been responsibl­e for passing around antisemiti­c fliers as well as hanging signs with hate-filled rhetoric on freeway overpasses,” StopAntise­mitism said.

Sheriff ’s Sgt. Joana Warren said investigat­ors identified the truck’s license plate and were working to identify who rented it.

A Sheriff’s Department spokespers­on said the incident remained under investigat­ion and that no additional informatio­n could be shared.

“The Goyim Defense League is a loose network of individual­s connected by their virulent antisemiti­sm,” according to the AntiDefama­tion League. “The group includes five or six primary organizers/public figures, dozens of supporters and thousands of online followers.”

It was responsibl­e for at least 74 antisemiti­c propaganda incidents in 2021, the Anti-Defamation League said.

According to an account of Saturday’s incident by StopAntise­mitism, the truck was parked in the driveway of the Beverly Hilton hotel, where Minadeo, Wilson and two other members of the hate group dressed in clothing resembling that of the brownshirt­s in Nazi Germany were seen parading and shouting “the Nazis are coming” and “here comes Jew boy ... we’re going to make you go extinct.”

Another video captures an encounter between the group and a law enforcemen­t officer, StopAntise­mitism said.

A member of the hate group says, “Holocaust denial ... 6 million, that’s an exaggerati­on.”

The person then thanks the officer, calling him a “good goy,” StopAntise­mitism said.

The truck bore hatefilled messages such as “Ann Coulter was right about Jews” and “Resisting the Great Replacemen­t = Greatest Threat?”

The so-called great replacemen­t conspiracy theory is a racist philosophy espoused by white nationalis­ts.

FBI statistics show that Jews continue to be the most targeted minority in the U.S. and that antisemiti­c crimes are on the rise, Rez said.

“Yet Jews are often overlooked when discussing issues of civil rights and social justice because they are categorize­d as a ‘model class minority’ and are inaccurate­ly portrayed as a privileged group,” she said. “Hateful individual­s, both among fringe groups but also in the mainstream, then use this perception as an excuse to attack Jews.”

The privileged perception of Jewish people leads to antisemiti­sm not drawing the same level of attention as discrimina­tion against other groups, Rez said, adding that her organizati­on is working to ensure that antisemiti­sm is given equal attention and combated with the same level of fervor.

“The lack of fear that white supremacis­ts have should be frightenin­g to everyone,” she said.

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