Read this story and think about how Bob Minton was assaulted by a hate-filled
cultist driven into an insane frenzy of murderous violence by Scientology
brainwashing. The cultist, Joe Neal, assaulted and attempted to strangle Bob
Minton outside the cult's Clearwater property, thus creating potentially huge
civil liability for the cult.
The Scientology crime cult should consider these matters seriously when stoking
the fires of hate in clearly unstable individuals like Joe Neal, Dennis Clarke,
Peter Ramsay and other potentially violent lunatics.
The Associated Press
HAYDEN LAKE, Idaho -- In a blow to hate groups that have made the Northwest
their clubhouse, the founder of the Aryan Nations has agreed to give up his
Idaho compound to satisfy a $6.3 million verdict against the white supremacist
organization.
Richard Butler wanted to avoid the spectacle of sheriff's vans showing up to
seize the property, said Richard Cohen, a lawyer with the Southern Poverty Law
Center in Montgomery, Ala.
Butler also agreed to no longer use the name Aryan Nations. He will deed the
property to Victoria and Jason Keenan, who won the jury award after they were
attacked outside the sect's compound in 1998.
"The Keenans will be able to do with the property what they want," Cohen said
Friday.
Edgar Steele, who represented Butler during the trial, said the deal will go
through only if a judge refuses to grant a new trial.
The 20-acre property containing the neo-Nazi sect's church, barracks buildings
and Butler's home were scheduled for seizure next Friday. Under the agreement
reached Thursday, Butler will remain on the property until Oct. 25, one week
after the expected ruling on a request for a new trial.
The Hitler-loving Aryan Nations moved to a ranch in the area in the 1970s and
declared it was creating a white homeland.
Butler moved to northern Idaho from California in 1973. He began holding an
annual event called the Aryan Nations Congress in 1981, attracting racist and
anti-government groups from across the country.
This month, a Kootenai County jury found Butler, a co-defendant, and the Aryan
Nations negligent in hiring and training the security guards who shot at and
assaulted the Keenans.
The Southern Poverty Law Center represented the mother and son, who were awarded
$330,000 in compensatory damages and $6 million in punitive damages.