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THE ORDER, WHITE SUPREMACIST, ARYAN TERRORIST RICHARD SCUTARI FBI WANTED POSTER

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    Description

    UP FOR AUCTION IS INDEED A RARE FIND.. THIS DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE/FBI WANTED POSTER IS FOR THE CO-FOUNDER OF "THE ORDER".. RICHRD JOSEPH SCUTARI.
    .
    The Order
    , also known as the
    Brüder Schweigen
    (German for
    Brothers Keep Silent
    ) or
    Silent Brotherhood
    , was a
    white supremacist
    terrorist organization active in the United States between September 1983 and December 1984. The group raised funds via armed robbery. Ten members were tried and convicted for racketeering, and two for their role in the 1984 murder of radio talk show host
    Alan Berg
    .
    The Order was founded by
    Robert Jay Mathews
    in late September 1983 at Mathews' farm near
    Metaline, Washington
    .
    [1]
    Mathews was baptized into the
    Mormon
    faith as a high schooler. He formed the "Sons of Liberty", an
    anti-communist
    militia mostly made up of Mormon
    survivalists
    , fundamentalists and associates of
    John Singer (homeschooler)
    that had no connection to the historical
    organization of the same name
    .
    A fundamental goal of The Order was revolution against the American government, which its members, and those of other white supremacist groups, believed to be controlled by a cabal of prominent
    Jews
    . The Order was named after, and partly modeled on, a fictional terrorist group in
    William Luther Pierce
    's novel
    The Turner Diaries
    .
    [2]
    The Order's goals included the establishment of a homeland (now the
    Northwest Territorial Imperative
    ) from which Jews and non-
    whites
    would be barred. They often referred to the
    United States federal government
    as
    ZOG
    , an
    acronym
    for
    Zionist Occupied Government
    . Members of the Order included Randy Evans, Gary Yarborough, Bruce Pierce, Denver Parmenter, Frank DeSilva (also known as Frank Silva), Richard Scutari,
    David Lane
    , Randy Duey, and David Tate.
    The Order drew up a hit list of enemies, and on June 18, 1984 radio talk show host
    Alan Berg
    was murdered in front of his home by Bruce Pierce, assisted by other members of The Order. Berg was number two on The Order's list.
    In December 1984, authorities were able to track Mathews down to a house on
    Whidbey Island
    where he refused to surrender ..During a shootout, the house was ignited by incendiary flares and became engulfed in flames, and Mathews was killed. Mathews is considered a
    martyr
    by some white nationalists.
    Funding
    Next, the group discussed how to fund actions of The Order, considering bidding on lumber-jacking and timber contracts, counterfeiting money, diaspora funding from overseas oil countries, and robberies. Though timber contracts were legal, counterfeiting money appealed to the ideals of the group in that it undermined the government by devaluing US currency. Robbery was first denied as an option due to its perceived sinful nature, until someone suggested they could rob pimps and dope dealers, which would raise money for the organization as well as set back street criminals in their businesses.
    The organization won a bid on a timber trimming contract for a trail in the Salmo-Priest Wilderness. After five hours of grueling work, Matthews decided to call off the work and head home. Headed back to the trucks, David Lane muttered, "Well, we're going to have to be better thinkers than our fathers were, because we're sure not the men they were,"
    [7]
    while Matthews mentions that the pay off from the job "would not fund the right wing for a week anyway."
    [7]
    The Order decided to try their hand at robberies, attempting to
    target
    pimps and dope dealers. After weeks of trailing black men in flashy cars and realizing they had no idea what a pimp or dope dealer truly looked like, they decided to switch to other crimes for funding.
    The Order raised money through violent crime. This began with the robbery of a
    sex shop
    , which netted them 9.10. Their later attacks were more effective, including several lucrative
    bank robberies
    , as well as bombings of a theater and a
    synagogue
    . The Order ran a large
    counterfeiting
    operation, and executed a series
    [
    citation needed
    ]
    of armored car robberies, including one near
    Ukiah
    ,
    California
    that netted .6 million. Proceeds from these robberies were distributed to leaders of sympathetic organizations such as
    William Pierce
    (
    National Alliance
    ) and
    Frazier Glenn Miller, Jr.
    (
    White Patriot Party
    ).
    Convictions
    Ten members of The Order were tried and convicted under
    Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act
    (RICO) statutes with the help of the testimony of
    Frazier Glenn Miller, Jr.
    , who testified against Order members in order to have his own sentence reduced. In a separate trial, three other members of The Order were tried and convicted of violating the
    civil rights
    of Alan Berg. No one has been charged in the murder of Berg.
    David Lane
    , the
    getaway driver
    for Berg's assailants, was sentenced to 190 consecutive years on the charges of
    racketeering
    ,
    conspiracy
    , and violating Berg's civil rights. He died in prison in 2007.
    [13]
    Order member Bruce Pierce was sentenced to 252 years in prison for his involvement in the Berg murder, and died of natural causes at the
    Allenwood Federal Correctional Complex
    on August 16, 2010 at the age of 56. Like Mathews, Lane and Pierce are regarded by many
    white supremacists
    as heroes, political prisoners and martyrs. In another trial, 14 men were charged with
    sedition
    , conspiracy and civil rights violations. Thirteen of them were acquitted, and the judge dismissed the charges against the fourteenth man for lack of evidence.
    A 2011
    NPR
    report claimed that some of the people associated with this group were imprisoned in a highly restrictive
    Communication Management Unit
    .
    [15]
    Richard Scutari
    , a member of the Order, was sentenced to a 60-year prison term in 1986,
    [16]
    and was removed to
    USP Marion
    CMU in July 2008.
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