Tri-City Skins
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Tri-City Skins was an Ontario-based white power group active from 1997 to 2002, based in the Kitchener-Waterloo and Cambridge area. James Scott Richardson, was the group's most visible member.
Some members of the Tri-City Skins were alleged to have engaged in a campaign of ethnic intimidation, assault, vandalism and other property crimes. Some members have been arrested and charged with possession of illegal weapons and drug possession for the purpose of trafficking. [1][2].
The Tri-City Skins operated a website that led to a complaint about its promotion of racial hatred. [3] The Tri-City Skins' website was hosted by former Canadian Ethnic Cleansing Team leader Alexan Kulbashian (a.k.a. Alex Krause)'s Internet service provider, Affordable-Space.com. [4]
Lawyer Richard Warman filed a federal human rights complaint against the website and other named respondents. On March 10, 2006, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal ruled that Richardson and Kulbashian were guilty of violating the Canadian Human Rights Act, and ordered the pair to pay $8,000 in fines and compensation. Kulbashian's Internet service provider was fined an additional $3,000. This case marked the first time in Canadian history that an Internet service provider had been found guilty of hosting a website promoting hatred against visible minorities. A complaint against the Tri-City Skins organization was dismissed, since Warman failed to prove that the group existed outside of the website. [5]
[edit] External links
- Skinheads on the March
- Issues Analysis: Hate and Bias Incidents in Southern Ontario (2003) Word Doc.
- Web site Urges Violence
- Canadian Ethnic Cleansing Team and the Tri-City Skins
- Canadian Human Rights Tribunal ruling: January 30, 2006
- Racism alive and well in K - W Pdf. document
- Anti-racist sctivists disrupt neo-Nazi celebration at Walper Pub Pdf. document
- The New Generation of Organised Racialism in Canada
- 2004 Audit of Antisemitic Incidents