

“After that, they sent someone to his apartment and found him dead.” “I was the one who let his right-hand man know something was wrong,” Nazzaro wrote, telling the Base how he alerted Covington’s people about the strange no-show.
#INSURGENCY IN AMERICA TRIAL#
Within a year, a significant portion of the men shooting guns would be in prison cells awaiting trial on a variety of terrorism-related charges. And though it wasn’t ready for the future insurgency he desired, its members believed there would come a time when they could give their lives for the cause of a white ethnostate born out of the ashes of society’s collapse.

Nazzaro, who hasn’t been charged with a crime and is allegedly in Russia, had high hopes for his terror group, then bordering on a few dozen members. Later that day, Norman Spear, an alias for the stone-faced leader who would eventually be outed as a 47-year-old New Jersey native with a private school pedigree named Rinaldo Nazzaro, put his patches back on and presented three of the members who had leadership roles in the group with flags and knives adorned with three wolfsangels-the group’s symbol and an allusion to the markings of the German SS from World War II-and the name emblazoned across the lower blade: the Base. What those local cops hadn’t realized was that they had encountered members of a neo-Nazi terror group, training for the next phase of the violent American experience: race war. The men then went back to shooting, filming their exploits for propaganda videos. After a soft warning to keep quiet, they left.

The police said there was a noise complaint from a nearby property and that they were just checking in.
