
A racist and supremacist who abused and sent disturbing threat messages to a woman and her son has ran to Nigeria to escape justice after he was sued. Notorious neo-nazi white racist and supremacist, Andrew Anglinm is hiding in Nigeria to escape justice A notorious neo-nazi white racist and supremacist, Andrew Anglin who is the founder of The Daily Stormer website has ran to Nigeria after he was sued for racially abusing, hating and intimidating a woman identified as Tanya Gersh, an American realtor, and her 12-year-old son. They were cyber bullied, intimidated, threatened and hated by Anglin who fled the United States to live in Nigeria in order to escape punishment.
Here is the full report by CNN:
Once the calls began, they did not stop. Swiping to decline a call just led to the phone ringing again. Blocked number after blocked number filled up the voice mail. Deleting one message just created space for another to take its place. Then came the tweets and the email messages.
The volume was overwhelming. The content: vile and terrifying. Gunshots rang out from voice mails. Emails and texts read:
Gersh was called a "bitch," "a worthless c**t," and told countless times she was nothing more than a filthy "k**e." The vile and ugly words were spelled out in full when sent to Gersh.
The messages began late at night and continued into the early hours, keeping her family awake. Or there was a night of silence, broken by an onslaught at 4 a.m., jolting the family from sleep.
One voice mail -- "You are surprisingly easy to find on the Internet. And in real life" -- ended Gersh's lifelong practice of leaving her home and car unlocked in her little Montana town, nestled by a lake in the Rocky Mountains.
Whitefish, Montana (CNN)Once the calls began, they did not stop. Swiping to decline a call just led to the phone ringing again. Blocked number after blocked number filled up the voice mail. Deleting one message just created space for another to take its place. Then came the tweets and the email messages.
The volume was overwhelming. The content: vile and terrifying. Gunshots rang out from voice mails. Emails and texts read:
Tanya Gersh found herself buried in an avalanche of hate, one she had not seen coming and one that focused on one fact: She's Jewish.
Gersh was called a "bitch," "a worthless c**t," and told countless times she was nothing more than a filthy "k**e." The vile and ugly words were spelled out in full when sent to Gersh.
The messages began late at night and continued into the early hours, keeping her family awake. Or there was a night of silence, broken by an onslaught at 4 a.m., jolting the family from sleep.
One voice mail -- "You are surprisingly easy to find on the Internet. And in real life" -- ended Gersh's lifelong practice of leaving her home and car unlocked in her little Montana town, nestled by a lake in the Rocky Mountains.
It became unbearable, Gersh said. She described panic attacks, vomiting, shaking and sweating. And then the times she could not even catch her breath.
Now, she was in fear of almost anyone she met. Her old way of life had been washed away. She was now in an America full of hate. It was an America where racism and bigotry have powerful online platforms. Gersh learned that one blog post could lead to an anonymous online assault by a group of hateful people hell bent on destroying her life. All it took was a few keystrokes, amplified by a social media megaphone, to send the deluge of repulsive messages her way and heighten tensions in this quaint ski resort town.
All because of what started, Gersh says, as a "mother-to-mother" chat. Gersh appears to have become a target for hate after contacting tenants of a local building. Gersh says she was then called by the building's owner, Sherry Spencer, the mother of white supremacist Richard Spencer.
Gersh says she warned Sherry Spencer about looming protests at the building in Whitefish, a Montana town of 7,300 where both women live. Gersh says she advised Spencer to disavow the views of her son, including that the United States is a country for white people. She says she offered to sell Spencer's property as a way of defusing tensions in town. Gersh suggested Spencer donate money to a human rights group.
Sherry Spencer refused to speak to CNN when we reached her on the phone. Earlier, she wrote in a blog post that Gersh, a Realtor, had threatened her, saying protesters and media would turn up and drive down the building's value if she didn't sell. Whitefish Police Chief Bill Dial said Sherry Spencer did not file a complaint with police, though her son Richard Spencer accused Gersh of extortion in interviews and a video diary. No law enforcement agency has filed any charges relating to the dispute.
There was comment aplenty, though, on DailyStormer which spews neo-Nazi propaganda. Andrew Anglin, the site's founder, accused Gersh of extortion in a blog post. And he exhorted readers to send Gersh -- whom he also identified as Jewish -- enough messages to make a point.
He then told them: "(I)t's that time."
For three months, packed luggage sat on the floor of Gersh's home. She debated fleeing, to escape what felt like an army of online hate coming after her.
The Daily Stormer published more about Gersh and her "Jew agenda," once with a doctored photo showing her and her tween son on the gates of the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz.
A tweet was sent to Gersh showing her surrounded by gas, with the message:
More messages referenced crematoriums and said she should have died in the Holocaust.
A tweet to her 12-year-old son had an image of an oven with the message:
For Gersh, these threats were personal and real, not to be confused with generic if vile ramblings on an online comments board
And Gersh decided to take a stand. She didn't know who had threatened her -- they hid behind withheld numbers and untraceable email addresses -- but knew who she believed had sent them into her life.
On DailyStormer Anglin wrote he has hired a First Amendment lawyer to fight the lawsuit; he says he was simply "blogging." A prominent fundraising post declares: "The Daily Stormer is being sued by Jewish terrorists. In order to survive, we need shekels." It is paired with another doctored photo of Tanya Gersh, her head on a dragon's body being slain by a knight on a white horse with the face of Anglin. So far there have been around 2,000 donations, totaling in excess of $150,000.
Still, Anglin did ask readers to leave the Gersh family alone, allow the case to proceed and be simply about protected speech.
Lawyers for Gersh say it is ironic that they cannot find Anglin -- a man apparently proud of what he's done -- to serve him to compel him to appear in court. But they expect the case to proceed.
CNN reached out to Anglin, who told us he now lives in Lagos, Nigeria, where he says his rights to say what he wants are not limited. He declined to comment to us on the Gersh case.
Morrison and Gersh believe Anglin is not the whole problem, as he has followers ready to be encouraged to act. Morrison describes them as an "army" that carries out "vicious attacks that are done in a concerted way at the beck and call of a commander who puts out the orders on this website."
Robert Ray, who writes features for The Daily Stormer under the name "Azzmador," told CNN he was "absolutely" OK with what was written on the site about Gersh. He called her a "Jewish terrorist" for allegedly threatening Richard Spencer's mother.
But he adds that messages to Gersh were not threats, but expressions of opinion.
"You are allowed to believe whatever you want to believe but you absolutely cannot take your beliefs and use it to terrorize," Gersh says.
Words do matter, she and her legal team argue. The SPLC tracks instances of hatred from all groups. It says the unapologetic hatred on the Daily Stormer -- which also takes aim at African-Americans and opponents of President Donald Trump, for example -- is a catalyst for division. Among its readers were Charleston, South Carolina, church mass killer Dylann Roof and the murderer of Jo Cox, a British legislator.
For Gersh, this is a new reality. She had never never heard jokes about Jews or been subject to anything anti-Semitic before this. Now she is consumed by fighting a battle she had thought was over. She talks about the Nazis -- with their swastikas, concentration camps and genocide -- being defeated decades ago. And how the world stood up then to say "Never again."
But now she finds it is her turn to stand up to another group of people who are adamant in their hatred of Jews. She says she must take on the people who told her she should have died long ago and those who told her they hope she kills herself now. So Gersh hopes her voice is clear when she echoes those words of warning again to those who have threatened her.
"What we are saying is never again."
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