Supremacists Face Charges the Grim Search Continues
rrvlct hls- rapefntatf. «ntfntoii. w. Collaf- Tm5ES7, « work, ftar. Coll IW . 1. Lo o m , ondftlofl. m. tx- non.SMW MfooenTT. luiwoooO, tMO/bost 2. Coll of- LOOK iBaiirltrstpr HrralJi mEMK ) Wanchester — A City o( Vlilaqe Charfp I Ford •trolt, in. led with Saturday, April 25, 10S7 30 Cent* mcoof Mranehy SlonMuro Brown . BIm WhHo Blecit WHITE Bros. pecialo /C *3290 •4200 •070S *9Vlw PLOT lAVE •7095 k •10,200 •13,200 •5095 FOILED •13,200 I •0495 •0290 m Supremacists ERS ir St. face charges r, C T IS LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - Fifteen white supremaciits were indicted in Arkansas and Colorado for murder of a radio talk show host, sedition, attempted murder and other crimes, the Justice Department said Friday. A federal grand Jury In Fort Smith, Ark., accused 10 men of seditious conspiracy, or trying to topple the federal government, over a 21-month period beginning in July 1983. Four other men were indicted on other charges by that grand jury, while three of the 14 men indicted in Arkansas plus a woman now imprisoned in California were accused of the murder of Denver talk show host Alan Berg. He was slain in a submachine gun attack outside his home June 18, 1984. Those named in the indictments had affiliations with such supremacist groups as the Ku Klux Klan; Aryan Nations; and the Covenant, the Sword and the Arm of the Lord, authorities said. “ Basically, they are anti-Semitic, anti-black,” said Don Pettus, special agent in charge of the FBI in srt. n . Arkansas. He said that he considered the supremacists dangerous and that authorities were on alert for the possibility of retaliatory violence this weekend.
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