Integrity First for America wound down operations in December 2022; click here to learn more. This is an archived website and Charlottesville case files will continue to remain available.

 

May 29, 2019- IFA Executive Director Amy Spitalnick published an op-ed on Auburn Voices about IFA's Charlottesville case:

 

In August 2017, hundreds of violent white supremacists and neo-Nazis stormed Charlottesville, Virginia for the so-called “Unite the Right” rally. We all know what happened next: while carrying swastikas and other hate symbols, and chanting “Jews will not replace us” and “white lives matter,” they murdered Heather Heyer and injured countless others.

This violence wasn’t spontaneous. It had been meticulously planned for months in advance online, where these violent extremists discussed which weapons to bring and how to plow down peaceful protesters with cars.

And while Charlottesville was a flashpoint, it wasn’t an isolated incident. You only need to look to Poway, Pittsburgh, or Charleston to understand the extent of this crisis.

These violent white nationalists are finding each other online and, emboldened by certain political leaders and fueled by hate, murdering people on our streets and in our houses of worship. Right-wing extremists killed more people in the U.S. last year than any year since 1995, the year Timothy McVeigh bombed Oklahoma City.

 

The full article can be read on Auburn Voices. Stay updated on our case through TwitterInstagram, and Facebook

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Our lawsuit against the Nazis and white supremacists who organized the attack on Charlottesville goes to trial on October 25. Subscribe here for updates about the case and the broader fight against white supremacy.