Features
Neo-Nazis to march in protest of judge’s decision against them
Aryan Nation will take to the streets of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho despite impending loss of their rural compound
SPOKANE – This weekend, days before they lose their rural compound, members of the Aryan Nations will march defiantly down the streets of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho.
Saturday’s march is the most visible sign that Aryan Nations leader Richard Butler is not going away despite the $6.3 million judgment awarded against him in a civil rights lawsuit Sept. 7.
“It’s to drive home the point that I’m not running out of town like a whipped dog,” Butler said after filing for the parade permit.
It’s not clear how many supporters of the neo-Nazi group will march in support of its anti-Semitic, white supremacist message.
Past parades have had close to 100 participants. Last year’s event drew fewer than two dozen, who were greatly outnumbered by various protesters and news media representatives.
Butler’s supporters have been using the Internet to try and draw marchers to Coeur d’Alene, 30 miles east of Spokane.
“This is a white pride and racial awareness march where true Aryans are standing together ... and showing the fine folks of north Idaho and the national media that we are not going to be silenced,” wrote Vincent Bertollini of the white-supremacist 11th Hour Remnant Messenger.
Bertollini, a wealthy computer executive who lives in Sandpoint, Idaho, recently bought a house in nearby Hayden that Butler is living in.
One protest group, the Seattle-based United Front Against Fascism, plans to attend the 11 a.m. parade.
“Fascism cannot be vanquished in the courts alone,” said Luma Nichol, a founder of the group.
Coeur d’Alene city officials have tried to block past parades in court, but failed because of constitutional free-speech protections.
Human rights groups in the area say they do not believe in directly confronting the Aryans. The Kootenai County Task Force on Human Relations will use the parade as the occasion to roll out its new “Idaho, the Human Rights State” public relations campaign.
Protesters say that’s the wrong approach when dealing with a hate group such as the Aryan Nation.
“Turning your back on the fascists only encourages them,” said Gil Veyna of the United Front.
All Coeur d’Alene police officers will work Saturday, and they will be joined by staff from the Kootenai County Sheriff’s Department and Idaho State Police. Officers will reportedly set up barriers along the parade route in an attempt to keep marchers and protesters apart. Anyone who crosses the barriers will be arrested, Sheriff Rocky Watson has said.
Butler took out a permit for more than 100 participants on Sept. 8 — the day after losing the lawsuit brought by Victoria and Jason Keenan, a mother and son.
The Keenans were chased and shot at by Aryan Nations security guards when they drove past the group’s compound near Hayden Lake, Idaho, in 1998. A Kootenai County, Idaho, jury found Butler and the Aryan Nations negligent in hiring and training the guards.
On Thursday, a judge denied a request for a new trial for the Aryan Nations, clearing the way for the victorious Keenan family to take over the 20-acre compound as soon as next week.