Ku Klux Klan Newspaper Diversion Campaign Spreads p.11
By M.L. Stein
Saturday, May 2 1998
Saturday, May 2 1998
Published on AllBusiness.com
Organization's national imperial wizard confirms activities in multiple states;
latest incidents reported in Texas and California
In the latest in a spreading series of such incidents, newspapers in California and Texas report that a portion of their print runs have been commandeered for Ku Klux Klan recruitment drives.
In what it calls "newspaper night riding," the Klan takes the newspapers from street racks, wraps them with its recruitment literature and then delivers that package to the lawns and doorsteps of local communities.
The latest newspapers to report Klan diversion of their print products are the Classified Gazette of Santa Rosa, Calif., and the Dallas Observer, Employment News, Greensheet and Thrifty Nickel around the Dallas region of Texas.
A dragon Speaks
In an interview with United Press International, Jody Chapman, grand dragon of the Texas Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, confirmed that his organization was diverting the papers for its regional promotional campaigns. A resident of Odessa, Texas, Chapman told UPI he intended to continue using newspapers in this manner "for the rest of his life."
Many of the community members who receive such materials assume that the newspaper sold its insert advertising services to the KKK, one of the country's oldest and most infamous hate groups. There are frequently angry reactions.
In Santa Rosa, Kathy Noble, Classified Gazette office manager, said the paper received "tons of complaints" from Santa Rosa residents after they received Klan literature in their papers. "People are understandably very upset," she added. "And it's implicating Gazette ties to the KKK, which is not true."
E&P has previously reported that the Tri-County News and the Town Flyer newspapers of the Pittsburgh, Pa., area and the News-Sentinel and the California Job Journal of Lodi, Calif., have had sections of their print runs taken and redistributed as part of Klan promotional activities.
In most cases, the Klan takes current editions of free-circulation papers that are easily removed from their street racks. In one recent instance, it used out-of-date copies of a for-pay daily newspaper — the Lodi News-Sentinel. Those copies are believed to have been taken from trash dumpsters.
the wizard says it's legal
In an interview with the Indianapolis Star a few weeks ago, Jeff Berry, national imperial wizard of the KKK, confirmed his group was diverting newspapers in various states and said, "We checked with civil liberty lawyers and all that. And what we're doing is legal." Berry, who lives near Butler, Ind., said the Klan has distributed its literature with newspapers in several communities in that state although he did not identify the publications.
In reporting the latest
latest incidents reported in Texas and California
In the latest in a spreading series of such incidents, newspapers in California and Texas report that a portion of their print runs have been commandeered for Ku Klux Klan recruitment drives.
In what it calls "newspaper night riding," the Klan takes the newspapers from street racks, wraps them with its recruitment literature and then delivers that package to the lawns and doorsteps of local communities.
The latest newspapers to report Klan diversion of their print products are the Classified Gazette of Santa Rosa, Calif., and the Dallas Observer, Employment News, Greensheet and Thrifty Nickel around the Dallas region of Texas.
A dragon Speaks
In an interview with United Press International, Jody Chapman, grand dragon of the Texas Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, confirmed that his organization was diverting the papers for its regional promotional campaigns. A resident of Odessa, Texas, Chapman told UPI he intended to continue using newspapers in this manner "for the rest of his life."
Many of the community members who receive such materials assume that the newspaper sold its insert advertising services to the KKK, one of the country's oldest and most infamous hate groups. There are frequently angry reactions.
In Santa Rosa, Kathy Noble, Classified Gazette office manager, said the paper received "tons of complaints" from Santa Rosa residents after they received Klan literature in their papers. "People are understandably very upset," she added. "And it's implicating Gazette ties to the KKK, which is not true."
E&P has previously reported that the Tri-County News and the Town Flyer newspapers of the Pittsburgh, Pa., area and the News-Sentinel and the California Job Journal of Lodi, Calif., have had sections of their print runs taken and redistributed as part of Klan promotional activities.
In most cases, the Klan takes current editions of free-circulation papers that are easily removed from their street racks. In one recent instance, it used out-of-date copies of a for-pay daily newspaper — the Lodi News-Sentinel. Those copies are believed to have been taken from trash dumpsters.
the wizard says it's legal
In an interview with the Indianapolis Star a few weeks ago, Jeff Berry, national imperial wizard of the KKK, confirmed his group was diverting newspapers in various states and said, "We checked with civil liberty lawyers and all that. And what we're doing is legal." Berry, who lives near Butler, Ind., said the Klan has distributed its literature with newspapers in several communities in that state although he did not identify the publications.
In reporting the latest

