A Marine took part in the violent assaults in Charlottesville last summer and later bragged about it online with other members of Atomwaffen, an extremist group preparing for a race war. The involvement of current or former service members — often with sophisticated weapons training — in white supremacist groups has long been a concern.
By A.C. Thompson, ProPublica, Ali Winston, special to ProPublica, and Jake Hanrahan, special to ProPublica
By A.C. Thompson, ProPublica, Ali Winston, special to ProPublica, and Jake Hanrahan, special to ProPublica
This story was co-published with Frontline PBS.
The 18-year-old, excited by his handiwork at the bloody rally in
Charlottesville, Virginia, last summer, quickly went online to boast.
He used the handle VasillistheGreek.
“Today cracked 3 skulls open with virtually no damage to myself,” the young man wrote on Aug. 12, 2017.
Vasillios Pistolis had come to the now infamous Unite the Right rally
eager for such violence. He belonged to a white supremacist group known
as Atomwaffen Division, a secretive neo-Nazi organization whose members
say they are preparing for a coming race war in the U.S. In online
chats leading up to the rally, Pistolis had been encouraged to be
vicious with any counterprotestors, maybe even sodomize someone with a
knife. He’d responded by saying he was prepared to kill someone “if shit
goes down.”
One of Pistolis’ victims that weekend was Emily Gorcenski, a data
scientist and trans woman from Charlottesville who had shown up to
confront the rally’s hundreds of white supremacists. In an online post,
Pistolis delighted in how he had “drop kicked” that “tranny” during a
violent nighttime march on the campus of the University of Virginia. He
also wrote about a blood-soaked flag he’d kept as a memento.
“Not my blood,” he took care to note.
At the end of the weekend that shocked much of the country, Pistolis
returned to his everyday life: serving in the U.S. Marine Corps.
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Source: ProPublica
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