_________________________________________________________________ WHITE SUPREMACIST RECORD COMPANY IN OAKLAND (MICHIGAN) RAIDED IN TAX-FRAUD PROBE _________________________________________________________________ By David Shepardson, Gary Heinlein and Oralandar Brand-Williams The Detriot News April 11, 1997 Armed law officers Wednesday kicked in the door of a rural Highland Township home and seized records of a white separatist record company under investigation for state tax fraud. Officers wearing bulletproof vests approached the home with guns drawn shortly before 10 a.m. and finally forced their way in when no one answered, said neighbors on the 2900 block of Central. The target of the investigation is Resistance Records, a record company that distributes music for 12 white-power rock 'n' roll bands. The company also publishes a magazine and operates a site on the World Wide Web. "They were operating a business without a license and without preparing tax returns", said Sgt. Rodney Young of the Michigan State Police Treasury Division in Lansing. Officers from the Oakland County Sheriff's Department, Ontario Provincial Police and the Michigan Department of the Treasury also were involved in the raid. The Ontario Provincial Police were involved as part of their continual investigation of the group, which has roots in Windsor. Officers used a U-Haul truck to remove exactly 100 boxes of tapes, records, T-shirts, business records, cassettes, two computers and other items. Richard Lobenthal, the former Michigan regional director for the Anti-Defamation League who has tracked Resistance Records for nearly eight years, said the company has been a formidable arsenal for America's hate groups. "They've played a very active role in America's hate movement", Lobenthal said. "It's not a membership organization. You don't join Resistance. They sell records and CDs that advocate killing - some about killing minorities. Some advocate killing individuals by name." "They're zealots. They're very shrewd entrepreneurs, but this isn't just a business for them. They're believers.." A six-man police team has been watching the Highland Township home since Jan. 22, according to a 34-page search warrant issued for the raid. The search warrant also contained copies of a sales receipt from a Grand Ledge man who paid $24 for two cassette tapes espousing racial hatred, as well as a money order deposited at a local bank, to show that the group is not paying sales tax or filing the proper tax forms. The company incorporated in May 1994 and reported assets of $48,414, but the public company - with 10,000 shares traded - has a negative net worth of $34,991, according to Resistance Record's 1996 Domestic Profit report. Resistance Records, founded in 1994 by Windsor resident George Burdi, 26, and former Highland Township resident Mark A. Wilson, 29, is based in Detroit to skirt Canadian law regarding hate groups. Burdi also is the lead singer of one of Resistance Records' bands, RaHoWa, short for Racial Holy War. The company publicly downplays overt racism. "We define ourselves as white separatists, which expresses (our) desire for the establishment of a white homeland in the United States. As far-fetched as this notion may seem to the uninitiated, we believe that it is a sound political solution to the racial tension in the U.S. We seek to form alliances with members of any race that support racial separatism", the company states. Also on Wednesday, Ontario Provincial Police arrested Burdi on a 1993 assault charge unrelated to the Highland Township raid, after he lost an appeal. Burdi was initially arrested after a fight broke out between skinheads and anti-racist protesters in Ottawa. Burdi was convicted of assault for kicking a woman protesting a RaHoWa concert in Ottawa and served one month of a one-year jail sentence. He lost an appeal in February when Ontario's Court of Appeals concluded that the incident was "a brutal assault committed in the name of racist ideology." Burdi has insisted that he never attacked the protesters, whom he referred to as a "bunch of leftists". Instead, he said, they swarmed on his group and incited the violence. The news of Thursday's raid on a house rented by members of Resistance Records shocked the landlord. Pauline Walber, 76, said she didn't know Wilson and the others living there were involved with Resistance Records until after they signed the $950-a-month lease for her four-bedroom, split-level ranch. "Do you think that being Jewish (that) I would rent to a skinhead?" Walber said, who emigrated from Russia as a child. "I found it out after I saw it on TV and they signed a lease. They approached me when I had a vacancy, and I didn't make the connection. "I didn't ask him (Wilson) to leave. He was a very good tenant. He paid the rent on time. I made it clear to him that he would not do any action as a skinhead on my property. He was making records." Next-door neighbor Fred Butson said that Wilson, his wife, Dana, and two children moved away about a year ago. Since then, he said, several men lived at the home, which bustled with activity. "There's a lot of people who come and go, but there's been no problem", Butson said. "No parties. No fights or anything like that. They're friendly enough." He said UPS trucks arrived with crates and boxes "three or four times a day." Dark plastic over the windows prevented neighbors from seeing what went on inside, but Butson said his granddaughter had been inside and told him that the entire ground-level floor was packed with T-shirts, records and literature promoting white supremacy. Jason Snow, one of the tenants who was home during the raid, declined to comment Thursday. But another man who described himself as "an associate" of the current tenants said he was outraged. "These allegations are simply bogus", said Eric Fairburn, also known as Eric Wolf, wearing black fatigues and sporting an "Aryan" tattoo on his arm. "They don't like the message we put out. But it's protected by the First Amendment." "If we had an anti-racist publication, I don't think something like this would be happening." "This will not stop anything. All this is going to do is cost the taxpayers. ... I'm going to see what legal action I can take personally on this matter. Obviously, there is a market for this (white-power music) and, obviously, everybody doesn't buy into the multiculturalism thing." In 1992, Mark Wilson briefly served as national leader of the racist group Church of the Creator under the alias the Rev. Brandon O'Rourke and expanded the local chapter's membership to more than 80 people. But he had a falling-out with the group's founder, Ben Klassen, and was removed from the post. Klassen later committed suicide. Don Cohen, the Michigan regional director of the Anti- Defamation League, said he wasn't surprised by the tax charges. "It wouldn't surprise me that people who are advocating the overthrow of the government could have tax problems", Cohen said. "They do a lot of sales over the counter at concerts and a lot of mail order. "Any legal means that can be found to disrupt the activities of Resistance Records is good for those concerned about the violence and racism of the organization. I don't believe this will stop Resistance, but it's a setback that they will have to deal with." Copyright 1997 The Detroit News *****
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