The names of dozens of alleged white supremacists in Canada are
contained in files leaked by computer hackers in Europe intent on
exposing hate movements, CBC News has learned.
The alleged white supremacists' names were revealed earlier this
month by members of a loose-knit group of hackers called Anonymous on a
website called nazi-leaks.net, which is now offline.
In addition to emails and secret websites and blogs, the hackers
uncovered photographs of children giving Nazi salutes at a gathering in
Missouri, confidential legal documents and displays of Hitler tattoos.
A
picture of a young boy making a Nazi salute at a meeting in Missouri
are among photos uncovered when computer hackers infiltrated online hate
sites. (CBC)The exposure is a
huge blow to hate groups that organize online across Canada, said
Helmut-Harry Loewen, a University of Winnipeg sociology professor and a
member of the Canadian Anti-racism Education and Research Society.
"We can now begin to piece together a more accurate picture in terms
of the distribution of these types of racist groups across Canada,"
Loewen said.
Among the information hacked were the names of 74 Canadians — with
associated street addresses, email addresses and passwords — who are
members of Volksfront and Blood and Honour, along with 142 emails from
people who had joined Blood and Honour's Canadian online forum.
Alleged members charged
Attention has been drawn to Blood and Honour since the arrests in December of three alleged members of the organization who have been charged with attacks on five members of visible minorities in B.C.'s Lower Mainland.
Anti-racist groups hope the exposure hampers online recruitment by white supremacist organizations.
"[These organizations] are going to have to be even more careful in terms of who they trust, who they associate with," said Loewen. "They're going to have to look over their shoulders. The police will have access to this info once it becomes more widespread. Employers, neighbours and so on."
Supremacist angered
Another name uncovered by the hackers was that of Bill Noble, who in 2008 was convicted in B.C. of wilfully promoting hatred.
"If it can be determined that any of these individuals carried out these acts, because they were fully aware that they were interfering with the survival of an endangered race, then they should indeed be exterminated," Noble said in an interview with CBC News via Skype from a location he would not reveal.
"Obviously someone is really trying to harass me and cause problems for me," said Noble. "It's annoying as hell and it's probably compromised a lot of private information."
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