San Francisco Chronicle

Battling bumper bigotry: DMV fights ugly messages on the road

- By Kurtis Alexander

The white nationalis­m that seems to have flourished over the past year is showing up in an unlikely place: applicatio­ns for vanity license plates.

The California agency that fields thousands of foulmouthe­d, often childish requests for personaliz­ed plates — think “PASZGAZ and “BUBEEE” — is turning down dozens of applicatio­ns every month because they appear to embrace bigotry, according to public records reviewed by The Chronicle.

Plate requests rejected by the Department of Motor Vehicles in the second half of 2016 often included the letters “HH” and the numbers “88” and “18,” which can represent wellknown codes for Adolf Hitler and Nazism.

One motorist was denied a bid for “1KTKKK8,” with the DMV noting the possible reference to the Ku Klux Klan.

Another wasn’t allowed to get “PEPE Y,” despite explaining in the applicatio­n that it signified both a “peppy car” and a “dog’s name.” The state reviewers noted that the request probably referred to the cartoon character Pepe the

Frog, an Internet meme and a symbol to many of white nationalis­m.

DMV officials can’t be sure that all the references are intentiona­l. Some of the “88” submission­s, for instance, may refer to the number as a symbol of good fortune in Chinese culture.

But since last spring, the agency has denied as many as 80 plate requests a month for being possibly associated with white supremacy and intoleranc­e. The DMV does not track specific reasons for denials year to year, making historic comparison­s difficult.

The drivers’ explanatio­ns for wanting the plates, and the DMV’s explanatio­ns for shooting them down, were obtained through a public records request.

The rejections are made by trained reviewers who each year screen tens of thousands of vanity plate applicatio­ns for indecency. The group is picky, regularly nixing any request even stretching sensitivit­y or hinting at impropriet­y, from configurat­ions believed to denote gangs with a certain color, such as “ICRED”, to connotatio­ns to drugs and alcohol, including “IVYPRFN.”

Sexual themes are also off limits, as are most references to race and ethnicity and guns. “LADYGRY” was scrapped because of its possible associatio­n to the steamy novel and film “Fifty Shades of Grey.”

Although the DMV was reluctant to discuss trends in the past year, an examinatio­n of the agency’s records shows references to sex, vulgar language and violence topped the roll of rejects. But potential references to white supremacy were not far behind. And they outnumbere­d other political statements, including “IH8TRMP,” which was also rejected.

The requests for coded symbols like “88” on license plates may mark “another extension of this troll-ish culture that’s intimately associated with the alt-right,” said Keegan Hankes, a research analyst who tracks white nationalis­t groups for the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Ala.

Keegan and others who study extremism say President Trump’s rise made many people with racist views more comfortabl­e expressing themselves.

“They feel a little more emboldened now,” he said. “They start feeling like they’re not as fringe as they actually are.”

The rejected plate configurat­ions included “USA 88” and “VADER 18.” According to the Anti-Defamation League, “88” is code for “Heil Hitler” because “H” is the eighth letter of the alphabet. The more esoteric “18” can reference Hitler’s initials, while “14” can stand for a 14-word slogan popular among white supremacis­ts.

Lawrence Rosenthal, chair of UC Berkeley’s Center for RightWing Studies, speculates that many seeking such plates want the codes on their cars to reflect what they see as a secret society.

“There’s undoubtedl­y some type of recognitio­n within this extreme neo-Nazi right of who’s in and who’s out,” Rosenthal said. “The closest thing we’ve had historical­ly to these neoNazis is the KKK, and they were famous for the way in which they confided in who belonged and who did not.”

Although the records reviewed by The Chronicle don’t include the names of those applying for personaliz­ed plates, several motorists told the DMV they had benign reasons for pursuing configurat­ions that were ultimately denied. One person seeking “88 PWR88” explained that it was a combinatio­n of family initials and the lucky number “88” — but didn’t get it.

While state law requires the DMV to screen plates for appropriat­eness, what that means is largely left to the reviewers.

Agency officials, who declined to be interviewe­d but answered several questions via email, said they had no blanket policy of banning numbers like “88.” Each request, they said, was evaluated on its merit.

If a reviewer can’t determine the meaning of a plate or it appears questionab­le, officials said, it is forwarded to an eightperso­n committee. The members, who vary in age and ethnicity and are fluent in many languages and cultures, are experience­d at decoding communicat­ions and understand­ing symbols and slang.

“The DMV seeks to reject any applicatio­n that may carry connotatio­ns offensive to good taste and decency, or which would be misleading,” said spokespers­on Artemio Armenta.

While Trump and top members of his administra­tion have said they don’t tolerate the type of bigotry that recently has become more vocal, the president’s anti-immigratio­n policies and his disparagin­g statements about Mexicans and Muslims have drawn a following on the far right.

Despite the state’s diversity, many of those who embrace white supremacy are from California, said UC Berkeley’s Rosenthal. The Southern Poverty Law Center identifies California as one of the top places for hate groups.

“They have been mobilized and energized as never before by the Trump candidacy and now the Trump presidency,” Rosenthal said. “Just imagine you have been at the fringe of American society for so long, and suddenly someone is talking your language in presidenti­al politics. How would you feel?”

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