Johnny Asia
2009-04-18 10:29:12 UTC
"It seems to me that our enemies would like nothing more than to see
us retreat peaceably into the hills so that they could continue raping
the remainder of the land without having to worry about any 'kooks'
putting up a fight," reads one post dated Nov. 1, 2008. "I'll
subscribe to the camp that believes we are running out of time. A
revolutionary is always regarded as a nutcase at first, their ideas
dismissed as fantasy."
An account kept on Stormfront.org, a gathering place for racial
extremists and others from the far right, shows Poplawski's increasing
belief in a coming economic and political collapse in the days leading
up to the time of the shootings in which he is charged with killing
Officers Paul Sciullo II, 37; Eric Kelly, 41; and Stephen Mayhle, 29.
Details of Poplawski's extreme racial and political views came to
light yesterday after a leading researcher at the Anti-Defamation
League delved into his postings at Stormfront, a white-supremacist Web
site run by a former Ku Klux Klan leader in Florida.
Mark Pitcavage, the ADL's director of investigative research, said
Poplawski was logged on to Stormfront four hours before Saturday's
shootings.
Initially, he posted under the name "Rich P," which, sometime after
March 10, he changed to the more ominous-sounding "Braced for Fate."
Between Jan. 16, 2007, and Thursday, Poplawski expounded on race,
interracial mixing, and the presumed power of Jews in America.
A Nov. 28 post on the Stormfront account identified as Poplawski's
says: "I've been a longtime lurker on Stormfront, and I see myself
probably ramping up the activism in the near future."
His final post expressed concerns about the changes in the logo of the
Keystone State Skinheads, a neo-Nazi group.
On March 13, the Stormfront account linked to Poplawski carried a
lengthy post predicting economic collapse, engineered by a Jewish
conspiracy.
Still another post expounded about his dislike of African American,
Latina, and Asian women. "Don't mix your blood with dirt, son," he
posted.
At one point, advising another poster on ideal weapons, he praised his
"AK" - an AK-47, the kind of weapon police say he used to kill three
of their ranks Saturday.
Asked Dec. 8 which weapon he would want if he could keep just one, he
wrote, "I guess I'd have to say my AK. Which is nice because it
doesn't have to fall from the sky - it's in a case within arms reach."
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/local/20090407_Officers__killer_and_his_Web_world.html
Apr. 7, 2009
Officers' killer and his Web world
Racist postings by the man who gunned down 3 Pittsburgh patrolmen are
drawing scrutiny.
By Dennis B. Roddy
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Richard Poplawski, the man charged with gunning down three Pittsburgh
police officers Saturday, posted dozens of racist and anti-Semitic
messages on a far-right Web site, decrying race-mixing and predicting
chaos as the economy collapsed at the hands of "Zionist occupation,"
investigators said.
"It seems to me that our enemies would like nothing more than to see
us retreat peaceably into the hills so that they could continue raping
the remainder of the land without having to worry about any 'kooks'
putting up a fight," reads one post dated Nov. 1, 2008. "I'll
subscribe to the camp that believes we are running out of time. A
revolutionary is always regarded as a nutcase at first, their ideas
dismissed as fantasy."
An account kept on Stormfront.org, a gathering place for racial
extremists and others from the far right, shows Poplawski's increasing
belief in a coming economic and political collapse in the days leading
up to the time of the shootings in which he is charged with killing
Officers Paul Sciullo II, 37; Eric Kelly, 41; and Stephen Mayhle, 29.
The officers were shot while responding to a domestic disturbance at
the home Poplawski, 22, shared with his mother.
Poplawski, who was wearing a bulletproof vest, was treated for gunshot
wounds to his extremities.
Mourners yesterday lined up outside a Pittsburgh funeral home for the
first of the viewings for the officers, who will lie in state at a
municipal building tomorrow and then be remembered at a community
memorial service Thursday at a University of Pittsburgh arena. They
will have separate funerals.
+
Pucker your lips for the Apocalypse!
Johnny Asia, Guitarist from the Future
http://johnnyasia.com
-
us retreat peaceably into the hills so that they could continue raping
the remainder of the land without having to worry about any 'kooks'
putting up a fight," reads one post dated Nov. 1, 2008. "I'll
subscribe to the camp that believes we are running out of time. A
revolutionary is always regarded as a nutcase at first, their ideas
dismissed as fantasy."
An account kept on Stormfront.org, a gathering place for racial
extremists and others from the far right, shows Poplawski's increasing
belief in a coming economic and political collapse in the days leading
up to the time of the shootings in which he is charged with killing
Officers Paul Sciullo II, 37; Eric Kelly, 41; and Stephen Mayhle, 29.
Details of Poplawski's extreme racial and political views came to
light yesterday after a leading researcher at the Anti-Defamation
League delved into his postings at Stormfront, a white-supremacist Web
site run by a former Ku Klux Klan leader in Florida.
Mark Pitcavage, the ADL's director of investigative research, said
Poplawski was logged on to Stormfront four hours before Saturday's
shootings.
Initially, he posted under the name "Rich P," which, sometime after
March 10, he changed to the more ominous-sounding "Braced for Fate."
Between Jan. 16, 2007, and Thursday, Poplawski expounded on race,
interracial mixing, and the presumed power of Jews in America.
A Nov. 28 post on the Stormfront account identified as Poplawski's
says: "I've been a longtime lurker on Stormfront, and I see myself
probably ramping up the activism in the near future."
His final post expressed concerns about the changes in the logo of the
Keystone State Skinheads, a neo-Nazi group.
On March 13, the Stormfront account linked to Poplawski carried a
lengthy post predicting economic collapse, engineered by a Jewish
conspiracy.
Still another post expounded about his dislike of African American,
Latina, and Asian women. "Don't mix your blood with dirt, son," he
posted.
At one point, advising another poster on ideal weapons, he praised his
"AK" - an AK-47, the kind of weapon police say he used to kill three
of their ranks Saturday.
Asked Dec. 8 which weapon he would want if he could keep just one, he
wrote, "I guess I'd have to say my AK. Which is nice because it
doesn't have to fall from the sky - it's in a case within arms reach."
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/local/20090407_Officers__killer_and_his_Web_world.html
Apr. 7, 2009
Officers' killer and his Web world
Racist postings by the man who gunned down 3 Pittsburgh patrolmen are
drawing scrutiny.
By Dennis B. Roddy
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Richard Poplawski, the man charged with gunning down three Pittsburgh
police officers Saturday, posted dozens of racist and anti-Semitic
messages on a far-right Web site, decrying race-mixing and predicting
chaos as the economy collapsed at the hands of "Zionist occupation,"
investigators said.
"It seems to me that our enemies would like nothing more than to see
us retreat peaceably into the hills so that they could continue raping
the remainder of the land without having to worry about any 'kooks'
putting up a fight," reads one post dated Nov. 1, 2008. "I'll
subscribe to the camp that believes we are running out of time. A
revolutionary is always regarded as a nutcase at first, their ideas
dismissed as fantasy."
An account kept on Stormfront.org, a gathering place for racial
extremists and others from the far right, shows Poplawski's increasing
belief in a coming economic and political collapse in the days leading
up to the time of the shootings in which he is charged with killing
Officers Paul Sciullo II, 37; Eric Kelly, 41; and Stephen Mayhle, 29.
The officers were shot while responding to a domestic disturbance at
the home Poplawski, 22, shared with his mother.
Poplawski, who was wearing a bulletproof vest, was treated for gunshot
wounds to his extremities.
Mourners yesterday lined up outside a Pittsburgh funeral home for the
first of the viewings for the officers, who will lie in state at a
municipal building tomorrow and then be remembered at a community
memorial service Thursday at a University of Pittsburgh arena. They
will have separate funerals.
+
Pucker your lips for the Apocalypse!
Johnny Asia, Guitarist from the Future
http://johnnyasia.com
-