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<text id=93TT0251>
<title>
July 26, 1993: Today Los Angeles, Tomorrow...
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TERRORISM, Page 49
Today Los Angeles, Tomorrow...</hdr>
<body>
<p>An alleged plot by white supremacists to start a race war is
foiled
</p>
<p>By CHRISTOPHER JOHN FARLEY--With reporting by Sylvester Monroe/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> A group of skinheads in California had a dream, but it was
decidedly different from the one imagined by Martin Luther King.
Their vision allegedly went like this: a phalanx of skinheads
with machine guns would invade the First African Methodist Episcopal
Church in Los Angeles. The congregation would be sprayed with
bullets, and the pastor, (the Rev.) Cecil Murray, would be murdered.
Across the U.S., other blacks were potential targets--Rodney
King, (the Rev.) Al Sharpton, the rap group Public Enemy, perhaps
even a baseball player. An all-out race war would be triggered,
a final, bloody Ragnarok of the races.
</p>
<p> It's a phantasm that won't come true. Last week a coalition
of federal and local law-enforcement officials in Los Angeles
launched an assault on white supremacists, arresting eight people,
including one adult and one unnamed juvenile who were implicated
in the plot. Authorities said the suspects were affiliated with
three white-power groups: Tom Metzger's White Aryan Resistance
(WAR), the Church of the Creator, and a relatively new group
called the Fourth Reich Skinheads. Among those taken into custody
were Christian Gilbert Nadal, 35, a flight engineer for Continental
Airlines and his wife Doris, 41, a real estate agent. Most of
the suspects were slapped with various federal weapons charges,
but Christopher David Fisher, the 20-year-old leader of the
50-member Fourth Reich Skinheads, was also charged in the plot
to attack the A.M.E. church and kill well-known blacks and Jews.
</p>
<p> The arrests came just days after the Anti-Defamation League
of B'nai B'rith released a survey on the growth of the skinhead
movement in America. In 1988 there were about 1,500 skinheads
in 12 states; today there are about 3,500 in 40 states, and
they are responsible for at least 22 killings over the past
three years. "The skinheads are today the most violent of all
white-supremacy groups," the B'nai B'rith report concluded.
"Not even the Ku Klux Klan, so notorious for their use of the
rope and the gun, comes close." An FBI source has told TIME
that one of the juvenile members of the Fourth Reich Skinheads
arrested last week is being charged with a pipe-bomb attack
against a member of the "Spur Posse," the gang of teenage boys
in Lakewood, California, that won notoriety earlier this year
for awarding points among themselves for sexual conquests. According
to an affidavit, the Spur Posse member was targeted partly because
he was half Asian and half Mexican.
</p>
<p> The FBI, whose investigation began 18 months ago, planted an
undercover agent inside the white-supremacist community; one
of their civilian informants even posed as a minister of the
Church of the Creator. The agent was allegedly told by the plotters
that killing the pastor of the A.M.E. church would "stir the
masses," that "half-assed revolutions" don't work, and that
killing black leaders was the way to start the race war. One
skinhead said that "an average dumb nigger" should be slain
so the group could bond with blood. The violent rhetoric seemed
at odds with some of the members' backgrounds. Fisher, the skinhead
leader, is the son of a grade-school teacher and a computer-science
inneighbors say many of his friends are nonwhite. But the relative
of another suspect saw trouble coming. "He said he was fed up
with Mexicans, blacks," said Rene Nadal of his son Christian.
"I tried to convince him not to hate."
</p>
<p> When several of the conspirators almost finished assembling
a letter bomb to send to a rabbi in Orange County, the FBI decided
to make the arrests. "It was a judgment call that they might
do something without telling us," said Charlie Parsons, special
agent in charge of the FBI's Los Angeles field office. ``These
people are very unpredictable, and it's been like riding a bucking
horse." Announcing the arrests, authorities displayed an array
of racist paraphernalia and weaponry taken from the homes of
the suspects: pipe bombs, machine guns, a Confederate flag,
a Nazi flag and a framed portrait of Adolf Hitler.
</p>
<p> "This is one of the most successful infiltrations of white-supremacist
groups to date," said Terree Bowers, U.S. Attorney for the Central
District of California, whose office will prosecute most of
those arrested. "We think it will put a severe dent in the skinhead
movement in Southern California."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>