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Southern Poverty Law Center: Hate Group Numbers Up By 54% Since 2000

* Reuters is not responsible for the content in this press release.

Thu Feb 26, 2009 11:54am EST

MONTGOMERY, Ala., Feb. 26 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The number of hate groups
operating in the United States continued to rise in 2008 and has grown by 54
percent since 2000 - an increase fueled last year by immigration fears, a
failing economy and the successful campaign of Barack Obama, according to the
"Year in Hate" issue of the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Report
released today.

The SPLC identified 926 hate groups active in 2008, up more than 4 percent
from the 888 groups in 2007 and far above the 602 groups documented in 2000. A
list and interactive, state-by-state map of these groups can be viewed at
www.splcenter.org.

As in recent years, hate groups were animated by fears of Latino immigration.
This rise in hate groups has coincided with a 40 percent growth in hate crimes
against Latinos between 2003 and 2007, according to FBI statistics.

Two new factors were introduced to the volatile hate movement in 2008: the
faltering economy and the Obama campaign. 

"Barack Obama's election has inflamed racist extremists who see it as another
sign that their country is under siege by non-whites," said Mark Potok, editor
of the Intelligence Report, a quarterly investigative journal that monitors
the radical right. "The idea of a black man in the White House, combined with
the deepening economic crisis and continuing high levels of Latino
immigration, has given white supremacists a real platform on which to
recruit."  

Several white supremacists have been arrested while allegedly plotting to kill
Obama, and following the election he received more threats than any previous
president-elect. Scores of racially-charged incidents - beatings, effigy
burnings, racist graffiti, threats and intimidation - were reported across the
country after the election.

Extremists are also exploiting the economic crisis, spreading propaganda that
blames minorities and immigrants for the subprime mortgage meltdown. Tough
economic times historically provide fertile ground for extremist movements. 

As this issue points out, minority-bashing propaganda can spread rapidly
through the media, even when it has no basis in fact. The issue examines the
widespread media reporting of a false claim that undocumented immigrants held
5 million bad mortgages and were, therefore, responsible for the subprime
mortgage crisis.

The hate groups listed in this issue include neo-Nazis, white nationalists,
neo-Confederates, racist skinheads, Klansmen and black separatists. Other
groups target gays or immigrants, and some specialize in producing racist
music or propaganda denying the Holocaust.  

The Southern Poverty Law Center is a nonprofit organization that combats hate,
intolerance and discrimination through education, litigation and advocacy. The
Intelligence Report is the SPLC's quarterly investigative journal that tracks
the activities of hate groups and monitors militia and other extremist
anti-government activity. For more information, visit www.splcenter.org


SOURCE  Southern Poverty Law Center

Mark Potok or Heidi Beirich of the Southern Poverty Law Center,
+1-334-956-8200
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