November 15, 2024

Idavox Archives

Archived articles originally found on the One People's Project website.

NEXT AND FINALLY ON THE WHITE POWER CHOPPING BLOCK: HAL TURNER

Hal TurnerWhatever the hell was protecting Hal Turner all these years is no longer in the way, because as of 4:00 PM today, he has been sitting in a New Jersey jail cell, snatched up by Connecticut State Capitol Police for calling for lawmakers and an ethics officer in that state to be shot. This comes just a few days after he posted a picture of Dr. George Tiller with the word “GOTCHA” over it. Well, gotcha right back chump, and it’s about time – we think. Sadly, we have to see how this goes. Seriously, we have been on this clown for over a decade, both as individuals and as an organization, and we are still not too sure if they have anything now. It’s the same thing he has always done all these years, and from what we can determine, what he is in trouble for really amounts to nothing more than a misdemeanor. Hey, at least he spends this long in jail, andit is still curious that even for a misdemeanor they want to extradite him for it. We can’t wait to see how this goes, so enjoy this for the time being, but it is too early to celebrate.

Connecticut Post

HARTFORD — A New Jersey man with ties to white-supremacist and neo-Nazi organizations was arrested on felony charges Wednesday after his Web log suggested that two Connecticut lawmakers and a state ethics officer should be shot.

Harold Charles Turner, of North Bergen, also known as Hal Turner, was arrested by State Capitol Police for inciting injury

The arrest came the day after his blog alluded to using guns against Sen. Andrew J. McDonald, D-Stamford, and Rep. Michael P. Lawlor, D-East Haven, co-chairmen of the Judiciary Committee and Thomas K. Jones, enforcement officer for the Office of State Ethics.

Turner, 47, was booked in New Jersey, pending extradition to Connecticut.

Capitol Police Chief Michael J. Fallon said Capitol Police officers made the arrest Wednesday afternoon with the assistance of New Jersey authorities.

“Mr. Turner’s comments are above and beyond the threshold of free speech,” Fallon said. “He is inciting others through his Web site to commit acts of violence and has created fear and alarm. He should be held accountable for his conduct.”

Fallon didn’t know Wednesday night when the extradition would be completed and when Turner would face formal charges in Connecticut.

“It is very clear to us at the Turner Radio Network that the state of Connecticut has become tyrannical and abusive,” Turner wrote in his blog Tuesday.

He defended the Bridgeport’s Diocese’s lawsuit filed against the Office of


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State Ethics in an attempt to contest possible penalties for failing to register as a lobbyist March 11, when dozens of buses brought parishioners from throughout the state to protest a bill that would have changed the way Catholic parishes would be incorporated.

“While filing a lawsuit is quaint and the ‘decent’ way to handle things, we at TRN believe that being decent to a group of tyrannical scumbags is the wrong approach,” Turner wrote.

“It’s too soft. Thankfully, the Founding Fathers gave us the tools necessary to resolve tyranny: The Second Amendment,” Turner continued. “TRN advocates Catholics in Connecticut take up arms and put down this tyranny by force. These beastly government officials should be made an example of as a warning in others in government: Obey the Constitution or die.”

Turner then promised to post the home addresses of Lawlor and McDonald on Wednesday. Both lawmakers, who were the chief legislative proponents of gay marriage after the state Supreme Court announced in October that same-sex couples should be allowed to wed, were targets of another threat in mid-March, when a New Britain schoolteacher was arrested and later received accelerated rehabilitation.

Meanwhile, veteran Rep. Christopher L. Caruso, D-Bridgeport, a Catholic who has made ethics reforms a key portion of his legislative agenda, said Wednesday it’s clear that the Bridgeport Diocese should have registered as a lobbyist for the March 11 event, since Bishop William E. Lori set up the bus caravans from southwestern Connecticut.

“The law is the law and if an organization expends more than $2,000 then it must register as a lobbyist,” Caruso said in an interview. “In this case the Office of State Ethics did inquire of the Diocese and the Diocese response was to file a lawsuit. I think it’s in the best interests of the Diocese to comply with the law.”

He said that religious institutions have to be held to state ethical standards like any other special interest.

“The law was created to provide full public disclosure on how money is being spent to lobby the Legislature,” Caruso said. “The bishop took it upon himself to spend diocesan money and it’s simply a matter of filing a disclosure.”

Heidi Beirich, director of research and special projects at the non-profit Southern Poverty Law Center, said Wednesday that Turner is a neo-Nazi provocateur.

“He’s been involved in Nazi circles for a long, long time,” she said in a phone interview Wednesday from the law center’s Washington headquarters, where it investigations racism and hate crimes.

In January, 2008, the SPLC reported he was also apparently working as an informant for the FBI.

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