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US police officer suspended after allegedly sharing white supremacist images on social media

Robert Staam was assigned to monitor Ralph Northam protests following discovery of racist photo in governor's yearbook 

Matt Stevens,Elisha Brown
Thursday 07 February 2019 06:55 EST
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Sergeant Robert A Stamm has been suspended after an anti-facist group accused him of being linked to white supremacist groups
Sergeant Robert A Stamm has been suspended after an anti-facist group accused him of being linked to white supremacist groups (Virginia Capitol Police/ Twitter)

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A police sergeant in Virginia who was assigned to monitor the protests related to Governor Ralph Northam has been suspended after being identified by an anti-fascist group as having an “affinity with white nationalist groups”.

Robert A Stamm, 36, “has been placed on paid administrative leave pending the results of a review,” the Virginia Division of Capitol Police said in a statement.

Sgt Stamm joined the division in 2014 and was promoted to his current rank last year, officials said.

“There is a review policy in place, and we will follow that policy,” Colonel Anthony S Pike, the division’s chief, said in the statement.

Sgt Stamm declined to comment.

Authorities said they were “made aware” of a “possible violation of division policy” by Sgt Stamm earlier this week.

A police official specified that the possible violation that prompted the suspension was outlined in a blog post published by Antifascist of the Seven Hills. The group describes itself as an organisation that seeks “to fight fascists” in Richmond, Virginia, “as communists and anarchists united in militant opposition”.

The group published several pictures – apparently pulled from Mr Stamm’s social media accounts – of what it said was him with tattoos, flags and banners it said were symbols and images associated with Nazis and white supremacists.

Brian Levin of the Centre for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino, said some of the symbols could have “dual messages”.

For instance, the Wolfsangel symbol – which resembles one of the tattoos – is a centuries-old insignia that was later used in Nazi Germany, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

“These symbols, whether Wolfsangel or others, embrace Nordic history and culture,” Mr Levin said. “A lot of this has been appropriated by modern-day white supremacists and neo-Nazis.”

The anti-fascist group said Sgt Stamm came to its attention during the recent protests on the Capitol grounds during which people have demanded that Mr Northam resign over a racist photo in his medical school yearbook.

Anti-fascists noticed he had a large plaster covering his neck during one of the protests, the group said in its blog post. The police official confirmed that Mr Stamm had been assigned to patrol Virginia’s Executive Mansion at least twice in recent days.

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The group also alleges that on Sgt Stamm’s Facebook page – which, along with other social media accounts appears to have been deleted – he was “friends with a number of people who claim to be associated with the group Asatru Folk Assembly” and at one point earlier this year added a profile photo of himself with what the group said was the Asatru Folk Assembly logo overlaid on it.

The Southern Poverty Law Centre has called the Asatru Folk Assembly “perhaps this country’s largest neo-Völkisch hate group”. Neo-Völkisch adherents, the law centre says, are “spirituality premised on the survival of white Europeans and the preservation of dead or dying cultures they presume to embody” and “organised around ethnocentricity and archaic notions of gender”.

As recently as 2015, the FBI foiled a plot by two men in the Richmond area who ascribed “to a white supremacy extremist version of the Asatru faith,” an FBI agent wrote in a federal affidavit. The plot, the agent alleged, involved shooting or bombing black churches and Jewish synagogues and doing harm to a gun store owner.

The New York Times

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