Monday, August 6, 2012

Alleged gunman, 'Jack Boot,' led neo-Nazi punk band

MySpace, End Apathy

A photo of Wade Michael Page, 40, who is accused of killing six people and wounding three others at a Sikh temple in Oak Park, Wis.

By Miranda Leitsinger, NBC News

The man who allegedly attacked a Sikh temple in southern Wisconsin, killing six people and wounding three, was a “white supremacist skinhead” and “frustrated neo-Nazi” who led a white power punk and metal band, groups that track extremism said Monday.

Wade Michael Page, 40, was the founder of End Apathy, according to Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center. In a blog post about Page, Potok cited an April 2010 interview that Page gave with the “Uprise Direct” music site about the band’s work.


Page said his band, which formed in 2005, “was based on trying to figure out what it would take to actually accomplish positive results in society and what is holding us back. A lot of what I realized at the time was that if we could figure out how to end people’s apathetic ways it would be the start towards moving forward. Of course after that it requires discipline, strict discipline to stay the course in our sick society.

“So, in a sense it was view of psychology and sociology. But I didn't want to just point the finger at what other people should do, but also I was willing to point out some of my faults on how I was holding myself back. And that is how I wrote the song ‘Self Destruct,’’ he said.

Mark Pitcavage, director of investigative research for the Anti-Defamation League, said Page was a mem­ber of the Ham­mer­skins, "one of the oldest and largest hardcore racist skinhead groups," and iden­ti­fied him­self as a North­ern Ham­mer­skin, part of the group’s upper Mid­west branch. 

End Apa­thy had been a fea­tured band in recent years at many Hammerskin-organized white power music con­certs, such as the August 2010 “Meet  & Greet BBQ & Bands” in North Car­olina, the Ham­mer­skins’ St. Patty’s Day Show in March 2011 in Orlando, Fla., and Ham­mer­fest 2011 last Octo­ber in Orlando, Pitcavage noted in a blog post, in which he said Page was a "white supremacist skinhead."

“We had identified page several years ago as someone who was prominent in the white power music scene,” he told NBC News, noting that they might have detected the alleged gunman earlier if it hadn’t been for his use of a pseudonym, “Jack Boot,” a reference to the high military boots worn by dictatorial regimes such as Nazi Germany.

Page was a “fully patched” member of the Hammerskins by late 2011 after going through an apprenticeship period. He had one of their tattoos on his right arm (a cogwheel), the group’s colors of red, black and yellow, and the numbers 838 (an alpha-numeric code that means “hail crossed hammers,” a reference to their logo of two-crossed hammers, taken from Pink Floyd’s, “The Wall”), Pitcavage said.

“He was very active on the white power music scene, which is one of the main things that the Hammerskins do in the United States,” Pitcavage said, adding that the group held music festivals and had a record label associated with them.

The Hammerskins emerged in Texas in the mid-to-late 1980s and spread across the country.

“It has had a strong association with violence over the past several decades,” Pitcavage said, noting that it was not surprising that Page, the alleged gunman, “was a white supremacist because white supremacist shooting sprees tend to be directed at minorities.”

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Sikhs at the Golden Temple, their holiest shrine

Page said in the “Uprise” interview that his music was a mix of '80s punk, metal and Oi!, a subgenre of punk.

“The topics vary from sociological issues, religion, and how the value of human life has been degraded by being submissive to tyranny and hypocrisy that we are subjugated to,” he said in the interview.

Page was a “frustrated neo-Nazi who had been the leader of a racist white-power band,” Potok, of the Southern Poverty Law Center, wrote. “In 2000, the Southern Poverty Law Center has found that Page also attempted to purchase goods from the neo-Nazi National Alliance, then America's most important hate group.”

Teresa Carlson, FBI special agent in charge in Milwaukee, said Monday that the bureau was “looking at ties to white supremacist groups” and was investigating the attack as a possible domestic terrorism case, which she noted meant "use of force or violence for social or political gain." The FBI did not have an "active investigation" on him prior to yesterday, she said.

Page, an Army veteran who served from 1992 to 1998 but was never deployed, said in the “Uprise” interview that he was from Colorado and that in 2000 he “wanted to basically start over.”

“So, I sold everything I owned except for my motorcycle and what I could fit into a backpack and went on cross country trip visiting friends and attending festivals and shows. I went to the Hammerfest 2000 in Georgia, over to North Carolina, up to Ohio, down to West Virginia, and out to California… .”

Since 2009, the United States has been in the middle of a “huge resurgence” of white-ring extremism, such as anti-government militias and white supremacy, Pitcavage said. The number of militia groups has quintupled in the past three years and there have been many arrests of white supremacists over the same time for acts of violence, he said.

The election of a non-white president and the struggling economy were the triggers, Pitcavage said.

“It’s just a huge number of incidents from the extreme right since 2009. It’s the biggest resurgence of right-wing extremist activity since the mid-1990s and the Oklahoma City bombings (in 1995) and it’s causing problems all around the country,” he added.

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