The
Rednecks
Out to Kill Obama
When
millions
watched
Barack Obama
give his
history-making
victory
speech in
Grant Park
on election
night, one
thing stood
out starkly
– the
bulletproof
screen
surrounding
him. But
just how
serious is
the threat
of
assassination
to the
President-elect?
By Andrew
Gumbel
November 16,
2008 "The
Independent"
-- -Shawn Adolf and
his cousin
Tharin
Gartrell
fancied that
28 August,
2008 would
be a good
day for the
next
president of
the United
States to
die. They
had the guns
– Gartrell
was later
caught with
a Ruger
Model M77
Mark II
bolt-action
rifle with
an attached
scope and
bipod, and a
Remington
Model 721,
also with a
scope. They
were
believers in
a radical
white
supremacist
ideology
that gave
them the
motivation
they needed
to risk
their own
lives, if
necessary,
to prevent a
black man
from
entering the
Oval Office.
(Or, as a
friend
reported
Adolf as
saying: "No
nigger
should ever
live in the
White
House.")
And they had
at least the
outlines of
a plan. They
checked into
the downtown
Denver hotel
where they
believed
Barack Obama
was staying,
and talked
about the
ways they
could try to
gun down the
Democratic
nominee on
the day he
was due to
accept his
party's
nomination
at an
outdoor
sports arena
before an
adoring
crowd of
more than
70,000
people.
Like many
assassins
before them,
both the
successful
ones and the
idle
fantasists,
Adolf and
Gartrell
took their
inspiration
from popular
culture.
They
considered
hiding a
rifle inside
a hollowed
out
television
camera – an
idea they
borrowed
from the
Kevin
Costner-Whitney
Houston
vehicle The
Bodyguard.
(It is also
similar to
the way al-Qa'eda
operatives
posing as a
news crew
assassinated
Ahmad Shah
Massoud, the
leader of
Afghanistan's
Northern
Alliance, on
9 September,
2001, but it
is far from
clear
whether
Adolf and
Gartrell had
any notion
of this.)
They toyed
with the
idea of
hitting
Obama from
as far away
as 750
yards, using
one of their
high-powered
rifles;
according to
their friend
Nathan
Johnson, who
may or may
not have
been part of
the plot,
they had in
mind the
conspiracy
theory that
President
Kennedy was
not shot by
Lee Harvey
Oswald from
the sixth
floor of the
Texas School
Book
Depository
building,
but rather
by
professional
assassins
stationed on
the "grassy
knoll" above
Dallas's
Dealey
Plaza.
None of
these plans
was ever
remotely
realistic,
however.
Adolf and
Gartrell may
have had
some
fearsome
weaponry,
and a vague
affiliation
with a white
supremacist
biker gang
called the
Sons of
Silence,
which
disavowed
them the
moment they
were
arrested.
But they
were also
rank
amateurs
living in a
crystal
methamphetamine-induced
haze of
paranoia and
race hatred.
(One can't
help
thinking
Adolf's name
went to his
head, at
least a
little, as
he fingered
the swastika
ring on his
finger.)
They had no
clue how to
circumvent
the security
surrounding
Obama –
prosecutors
who examined
their plans
laughed them
off as
ludicrously
naïve. And
they
couldn't
even figure
out what
every
half-interested
member of
the press
corps knew,
that Obama
was not
staying at
the Hyatt
Regency, the
temporary HQ
of the
Democratic
National
Committee,
but at a
different
hotel
altogether.
Four days
before
Obama's
acceptance
speech,
Gartrell was
pulled over
for
drunk-driving
in the
Denver
suburb ' of
Aurora after
a patrol
officer
spotted his
rented Dodge
Ram truck
swerving
erratically,
and the
whole plot,
such as it
was, fell
apart almost
instantly.
Certainly,
the officer
found plenty
inside the
truck to
sound alarm
bells – the
two
high-powered
rifles, a
silencer, a
bulletproof
vest,
camouflage
clothing,
and three
fake
identification
cards. But
it was also
clear that
Gartrell was
high on meth
as well as
drunk. The
truck
contained
enough
drug-making
equipment to
be
considered a
mobile meth
lab.
Gartrell
ratted out
Johnson and
Adolf almost
as soon as
he was taken
in and
photographed
for his
singularly
striking
mugshot.
(With his
bleached
blonde hair,
heavy silver
earrings and
pierced lip,
he looks
like the
neo-Nazi
from central
casting.)
Johnson was
in the room
at the Hyatt
Regency, and
wasted no
time in
talking
himself –
insisting he
had no idea
about any
assassination
plot while
almost
simultaneously
telling the
world Adolf
was planning
to "go down
in a blaze
of glory"
and take
Obama with
him.
Adolf was a
tougher
proposition,
the only one
of the three
with a
serious
criminal
record,
including
burglary,
forgery,
drugs and
weapons
raps. At the
time of his
arrest he
was wanted
on eight
outstanding
charges and
had recently
skipped out
on a $1
million bail
payment. He
was staying
at a
different
hotel in the
Denver
suburbs.
When the
police
arrived, he
jumped out
of his
sixth-floor
room on to
the roof of
the hotel
kitchen four
floors
below, then
jumped again
to the
ground,
breaking his
ankle as he
landed. He
didn't make
it far. He,
too, was
found to be
high on
meth. When
asked why he
was wearing
a
bulletproof
vest, he
said he was
convinced
someone
wanted to
kill him.
We will no
doubt learn
more
colourful
details
about the
trio of
would-be
assassins
when their
trial begins
this week.
Intriguingly,
though, they
are being
prosecuted
on drugs and
weapons
charges
only. Their
prosecutor,
Troy Eid,
has said he
is
absolutely
confident
the "meth
heads", as
he calls
them, never
posed a risk
to Obama or
anyone else.
Not everyone
is happy
with this
decision.
After all,
marginal
people have
hatched
assassination
plots
before, and
sometimes
succeeded –
one thinks
of John
Hinckley
hitting
President
Reagan in
1981. And
Barack Obama
was never
just another
presidential
contender;
as the first
African
American to
come even
close to the
highest
political
office on
the planet,
in a country
whose
history is
spattered
with the
blood of
racial
animus, he
is, by
common
consent, a
target
several
orders of
magnitude
more
tempting
than the
average for
an extremist
fringe of
kooks,
crazies,
anti-government
militia
types, Ku
Klux Klan
members and
other white
race
warriors,
all of whom
tend to be
unforgiving
in their
ideological
fervour, not
to mention
armed to the
teeth.
He was
granted
24-hour
Secret
Service
protection
just a few
months into
his
campaign, in
May 2007,
after his
friend and
fellow
Illinois
senator,
Dick Durbin,
raised the
alarm on his
behalf.
(Usually
candidates
receive that
protection
far later in
the election
cycle, after
they have
their party
primaries
sewn up.) We
don't know
exactly how
hard the
Secret
Service has
had to work
on his
behalf,
although we
do know that
two men from
the old
confederate
South – one
from North
Carolina,
the other
from Florida
– were
arrested and
charged with
making
threatening
statements
against him
in July. We
know that
effigies of
Obama being
lynched, or
sliced
through the
head with a
hatchet,
have popped
up
periodically
around the
country –
one on the
campus of
the
University
of Kentucky,
another in
Orange
County,
California
in the
run-up to
Halloween.
We also know
that Obama's
supporters
have been
almost
maniacal in
their desire
to prevent
him sharing
the tragic
fate of the
Kennedys and
Martin
Luther King.
On a couple
of occasions
during
primary
season, when
security '
guards at
Obama
campaign
events
stopped
searching
people's
bags because
of the
backlog of
people
trying to
get in,
sympathetic
reporters,
bloggers and
ordinary
members of
the public
complained
as loudly as
they knew
how.
Likewise,
when someone
at a Sarah
Palin rally
in
Clearwater,
Florida in
early
October
reacted to a
mention of
Obama's name
by shouting
"kill him!",
there was
such a
clamour on
the internet
that the
Secret
Service made
a rare
public
announcement
saying it
was
launching an
official
investigation.
How much of
a risk of
assassination
does Obama
face? The
most
immediate,
comfortable
answer to
that is: not
much. The
Secret
Service has
vastly
improved its
procedures
and
protocols
since the
spate of
political
assassinations
of the 1960s
and early
1970s. No
president
would now be
allowed to
drive at a
snail's pace
in an
open-top car
through the
centre of a
major city,
as John
Kennedy did
in Dallas on
22 November,
1963. The
sheer
numbers of
Secret
Service
members
assigned to
presidential
protection
has
increased
dramatically
since the
attempt on
Reagan's
life – we
don't have
exact
figures on
how much,
but we do
know that
when one
unhinged man
toyed with
the idea of
tossing a
grenade at
President
Bush in
Atlanta in
2005, he
never got
remotely
close enough
to give it a
real try.
The more
worrying
answer is
that Obama
will almost
certainly
inspire a
large number
of
assassination
plots
because of
the colour
of his skin,
and that it
only takes
one of them
to be
blessed with
luck, proper
organisation
and a little
official
incompetence
to pose a
serious
threat. When
asked how
much of a
risk he
faces, he
has
acknowledged
that the
color of his
skin will be
a problem
for some
people. And
he knows
that Colin
Powell, the
only other
African
American of
significant
stature in
recent times
to consider
a run at the
White House,
decided not
to pursue
the
presidency
in part
because his
wife, Alma,
feared for
his safety.
"There's not
any question
he's under
more threat
than most
politicians,"
said Mark
Potok, one
of America's
leading
researchers
into hate
groups who
edits a
monthly
Intelligence
Report for
the
Alabama-based
Southern
Poverty Law
Center. "I
think we are
seeing a
kind of
perfect
storm of
conditions
that might
well help
white
supremacist
movements
grow, and
grow
rapidly.
"We have
changing
demographics,
and the
Census
Bureau
projection
that whites
will lose
their
majority
status in
America by
2040. We
have the
tanking
economy, and
now... a
black man in
the White
House. This
makes some
Americans
feel they
are losing
their world
– the sense
that the
country
their
forefathers
built is
slipping
away from
them."
The number
of racist
hate groups
tracked by
the Southern
Poverty Law
Centre has
grown by
almost 50
per cent
during the
Bush
administration
years, from
about 600 in
2000 to
almost 900
now. In
contrast to
the 1990s,
when the
"angry white
man"
phenomenon
fuelled the
militia
movement and
led to the
white-supremacist
inspired
Oklahoma
City
bombing,
much of this
new growth
has been
triggered by
virulent
hostility to
immigrants
pouring in
from Mexico.
It is
entirely
possible,
though, that
the emphasis
will change
now that
Obama is
about to
enter the
White House.
Certainly,
the neo-Nazi
movement
senses an
opportunity:
to judge by
the endless
chatter on
far-right
websites,
they see a
President
Obama as the
best
recruiting
tool they've
had in
years.
"Obama will
be a signal,
a clear
signal for
millions of
our people,"
the former
Louisiana Ku
Klux Klan
leader and
erstwhile
candidate
for
governor,
David Duke,
wrote
earlier this
year in an
essay he
called A
Black Flag
for White
America.
"Obama is
like that
new big dark
spot on your
arm that
finally
sends you to
the doctor
for some
real
medicine.
... Obama is
the pain
that let's
[sic] your
body know
that
something is
dreadfully
wrong...
Millions of
European
Americans
will
inevitably
react with
new
awareness of
their
heritage and
the need for
them to
defend and
advance it."
That logic
suggests the
far right is
not, in
fact,
itching to
pull the
trigger on
Obama.
Except that
we are
hardly
dealing with
rational
people. The
neo-Nazi
magazine
National
Socialist
wrote a
cover story
in September
purporting
to debunk
the "myth"
that Obama
might be
assassinated.
But the
cover also
showed a
photograph
of the
candidate in
the
crosshairs
of a rifle
(altered to
look like a
swastika)
under the
headline:
"Kill this
NIGGER?" And
the piece
went on to
suggest that
Obama,
backed by
Communists
and Jews,
planned to
commit
genocide
against
working
white
people.
Likewise,
the
"imperial
wizard" of
the Ku Klux
Klan, an
Indiana
railway
worker who
calls
himself Ray
Larsen,
denied any
intent to
attack Obama
when
interviewed
on
television a
few months
ago. But he
added: "If
that man is
elected
president,
he'll be
shot sure as
hell."
If that
doesn't have
the Secret
Service
worried, it
should. Some
security
experts have
already
started
drafting
memos with
ideas on how
to keep
Obama better
protected
using
state-of-the-art
technology –
for example,
hand-held
TeraHertz
scanners
that
would-be
assassins
could not
spot. Martin
Dudziak, a
Virginia-based
security
specialist
who has
worked on
counter-terrorism
issues,
pointed out
glumly that
it is
unusually
difficult to
profile
would-be
attackers.
As he put it
in a memo
drafted in
October:
"There are
frankly and
very
unfortunately,
a lot of
people in
the USA who
have
deep-rooted
'phobic'
hatred of an
African
American...
being
president.
We should
not try to
deny this
sombre
reality."
If the inept
Denver plot
was not
warning
enough, news
of another
planned
anti-Obama
assault
broke at the
end of last
month with
the arrest
of two White
Power
advocates in
Tennessee.
Daniel
Cowart and
Paul
Schlesselman
didn't
appear to be
any more
competent
than Adolf
and
Gartrell.
They had
grand
schemes to
kill more
than 100
African
Americans,
and
fantasised
about
killing
Obama
dressed in
white dinner
jackets and
top hats,
but they
couldn't so
much as rob
a house –
they gave up
on their
intended
target after
spotting a
guard dog
out back and
got picked
up after
shooting out
the windows
in a church.
Still, they
had some
serious
weapons: a
sawn-off
shotgun,
high-powered
rifles and a
couple of
handguns.
And Cowart
appears to
have been a
founding
member of a
hate group
called the
Supreme
White
Alliance.
While their
dreams of
killing
Obama might
have been
fanciful,
some of
their other
plans might
not. "They
might well
have shot up
a black high
school, or
hurt a group
of black
children,"
Potok said.
And it is
entirely
conceivable
that other,
more
competent
criminals
will follow
them. Obama
may not have
appeared
remotely
daunted when
he delivered
his victory
speech in
Chicago's
Grant Park
on election
night, but
it is worth
remembering
that he was
also
speaking
behind a
bulletproof
glass
shield. Such
precautions,
one
suspects,
will be the
rule rather
than the
exception
over the
next four or
eight years.
"There is a
boiling rage
just beneath
the
surface,"
Potok added.
"We're
talking
about a
minority,
clearly, of
whites. It's
hard to say
how large
that group
of people
is. But I
think this
represents
the
beginning of
a real white
backlash in
a certain
quarter of
the
population."