Richard Poplawski was a white supremacist arrested in Pittsburgh on April 4, 2009, for the murder of three Pittsburgh police officers responding to a domestic violence call.
Poplawski believed that the federal government, the media, and the banking system are all largely or completely controlled by Jews.
He also believed that a conspiracy led by “evil Zionists†and “greedy traitorous goyim†was “ramping up†a police state in the United States for malign purposes.
One of Poplawski’s favorite places for such conspiracy theories was the Web site of the right-wing conspiracy radio talk show host Alex Jones. Poplawski visited the site, Infowars, frequently, shared links to it with others, and sometimes even posted to it. One of his frustrations with the site, though, was that it didn’t focus enough on the nefarious roles played by Jews in all these conspiracies
Poplawski was a also member of Stormfront, a white supremacist website, where he was a frequent visitor and poster. Poplawski had reportedly posted a picture of his tattoo, a “deliberately Americanized version of the iron eagle†to the website, as well as a link to a YouTube video of Congressman Ron Paul discussing with Fox News host Glenn Beck the rumored existence of FEMA-managed concentration camps .
Richard Poplawski was a white supremacist arrested in Pittsburgh on April 4, 2009, for the murder of three Pittsburgh police officers responding to a domestic violence call.
Poplawski believed that the federal government, the media, and the banking system are all largely or completely controlled by Jews.
He also believed that a conspiracy led by “evil Zionists†and “greedy traitorous goyim†was “ramping up†a police state in the United States for malign purposes.
One of Poplawski’s favorite places for such conspiracy theories was the Web site of the right-wing conspiracy radio talk show host Alex Jones. Poplawski visited the site, Infowars, frequently, shared links to it with others, and sometimes even posted to it. One of his frustrations with the site, though, was that it didn’t focus enough on the nefarious roles played by Jews in all these conspiracies
Poplawski was a also member of Stormfront, a white supremacist website, where he was a frequent visitor and poster. Poplawski had reportedly posted a picture of his tattoo, a “deliberately Americanized version of the iron eagle†to the website, as well as a link to a YouTube video of Congressman Ron Paul discussing with Fox News host Glenn Beck the rumored existence of FEMA-managed concentration camps .
http://www.adl.org/learn/extremism_in_the_news/White_Supremacy/poplawski+report.htm