Neo-Nazi activist behind racist robocalls linked to threats of Idaho newspaper
LaughedAtHat Retweeted:
New from me: neonazi Scott Rhodes has sent racist and anti Semitic robocalls to six states.
Now he is using them to try to hurt the smalltown Idaho newspaper that first exposed him.
The far right
Neo-Nazi activist behind racist robocalls linked to threats of Idaho newspaper
Sandpoint Reader is target of new calls describing publisher as cancer that needs to be burned out
Jason Wilson in Portland, Oregon
@jason_a_w
Fri 28 Sep 2018 06.00 EDT
A neo-Nazi activist who sent out hostile and abusive robocalls aimed at top politicians and others has been linked to threats to the publisher of a small local newspaper that first exposed his activities. ... Scott Rhodes, who lives in Sandpoint, Idaho, was first identified by the Sandpoint Reader and linked with a campaign that targeted high-profile political races across the US and even murder victims with racist and antisemitic robocalls.
In recent days threatening robocalls and letters have been sent to the publishers of the Reader, an alternative newspaper, people linked to it and residents in the small rural town. ... The robocall described journalist Ben Olson, the publisher of the Reader, as a cancer on wholesome north Idaho, adding that cancer needs to be burned out.
When Rhodes was asked about the call by the Guardian via email, he sent a link to a YouTube video that reproduced the robocall audio, and featured video of a large stack of copies of the Sandpoint Reader being set on fire. ... That video has since been removed by YouTube. The hundreds of newspapers burned in the video represent a significant slice of the Readers print run, which Olson says is 5,000 a week.
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The Reader
unmasked Rhodes last December, after the neo-Nazi activist left racist propaganda at local high schools. They also revealed that he had carried out similar activities in Alexandria, Virginia. ... Rhodes makes a virulently racist video podcast called The Road to Power. He has been associated with similar robocalls in Idaho and at least five other states.
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