I just now read the 1993 book, “A Season for Justice”, roughly 30 percent of which is about your’s truly, and/or my organization Dees destroyed in 1986. Good insights for those interested in understanding why whites are not allowed to unite and organize and how attempts, such as The White Patriot Pary, were squashed by the JOG’s courts these past 40 years or so.
I don’t think the book can be read on line. I bought one, second hand on the net, for $5.37, including shipping.
Here are some quotes:
Pg 209. “By the end of 1984, Bobby Shelton’s United Klans of America and Glenn Miller’s Carolina Knights of the Ku Klux Klan – the established old guard and the rising new guard – would be subjects of our “unrelenting” campaigns.”
". . . two of the Center's most important cases, Bobby Person v. Carolina Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, Glenn Miller, et al, and Beulah Mae Donald v. United Klans of America, Robert Shelton, et. al."
Pg 214. “And klan violence and paramilitary activity frightfully reminiscent of Beam’s non-defunct Texas Emergency Reserve were dramatically increasing in North Carolina under former Green Beret Glenn Miller.
“In October, members of Miller’s Carolina Knights terrorized Bobby Person, a black man trying to get a promotion in the state prison system. We had been looking for an opportunity to go after Miller.”
Pg 222. “It was a tough decision to sue Bobby (Robert Shelton) because I knew it would cut off a helpful line of communication. I didn’t view this old man as a threat like Beam, Miller, and Wilkerson.”
Pg 225. “Klanwatch was monitoring this activity. Eastern North Carolina was rapidly becoming a Klan hotbed, thanks to one Glenn Miller. According to Miller, he was forced to retire because of Klan-related activities.”
“He (Miller) had witnessed the infamous 1979 Nazi-Klan counter-demonstration that led to the shooting deaths
of five communist party workers in Greensboro, and claimed he was more proud of being in the caravan with the instigators of that 88-second gun battle than anything he had accomplished during his two decades in the military.”
Pg 226. “When Lewis went to court in November 1983 on charges related to the harassment of Person, Miller and other members of the Knights, all in army fatigues, were there to support him. Having pointed a gun at Lewis and others in the truck, Person (the black prison guard) had also been arrested on the same charge; communicating a threat. The judge threw out the charges against both men.”
Pg 227. “The harassment of Bobby Person offered a good chance to stop Glenn Miller just as we had his ideological clone, Louis Beam.”
(I'll post more as time and inclination permits)
“To learn who rules over you simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize” —–Voltaire