Behind the Bastards - Do We Really Need to Talk About Kevin?
Episode Date: August 9, 2024Why do people keep posting that fake Voltaire quote and who is the pedophile who actually said it? Molly takes you back to the 90s, inside the Nazi compound where Kevin Strom started broadcasting a we...ekly antisemitic radio show. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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In 2009, Mitrice Richardson was released from the Malibu Lost Hills Sheriff's Station,
and she never made it home.
Nearly a year later, Mitrice's remains were found in a canyon, six miles from the station.
Her death is Malibu's greatest unsolved mystery.
I'm Dana Goody. In Lost Hills,
Dark Canyon, what happened to my Trice Richardson? Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. Hey, I'm Molly Conger, and this is Weird Little Guys, the show where I tell you about
the weird little guys trying to unravel the fabric of our society.
I've spent years researching and writing about right-wing extremism, and it's pretty
scary out there, I won't lie to you.
But the guys trying to ruin life as we know it are also kind of freaks and losers.
So here's one of them. Okay, we're going to start this off with a pop quiz. I'm going to read you a
quote, and I want you to tell me who said it. I'll give you a minute to think. It's multiple
choice. To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.
Was that A. Benjamin Franklin?
B. Voltaire?
C. Socrates?
Or D. A neo-Nazi pedophile on a white nationalist radio show in 1993?
Now if you guessed B, you're in Good Company.
Well, no, it's not Good Company.
The company is pretty terrible.
I can't say Bad Company without getting lost on a tangent
about Timothy McVeigh's obsession with the song Bad Company
by the band Bad Company from their album Bad Company.
So I won't say the company is bad, but it's a crowd.
No, the answer is actually D, Neo-Nazi pedophile Kevin Alfred Strome.
And it's a slight paraphrase of something he said in an August 1993 broadcast of American
Dissident Voices, the weekly radio program he hosted for the Neo-Nazi group National
Alliance.
Strome was living on the group's West Virginia compound, 300 acres in the mountains near
Hillsborough that they just call the land, and he was serving as the right-hand band
of the group's leader, his mentor William Luther Pierce.
The broadcast was entitled, All of America Must Know the Terror That is Upon Us, a name
he borrowed from a speech given in 1959 by another one of his great influences, Ravillo
P. Oliver.
And the quote gets new life every now and again when it's incorrectly attributed to Voltaire.
In the era of public discourse about whether wearing a mask was truly the most vile form
of tyranny, it made the rounds as COVID deniers pushed back against public health guidelines.
Like in January of 2022, when Kentucky Congressman Thomas Massey posted, You mustn't question Fauci, for he is science.
Accompanied by an image of the quote,
and it was sort of laid over an image,
I guess that's just a meme, right? Words on a picture.
The picture was of a large disembodied hand pushing down on tiny little people that it was squishing.
That original image is actually an anti-child labor political
cartoon from 1912. If you look at the uncropped version of the original picture, the sleeve
has child labor employer written on it. You know, they used to label everything in a political
cartoon. Ben Garrison didn't invent that. Australian Senator Cory Bernardi tweeted the
quote back in 2015. Contemporaneous reporting doesn't give me any insight into exactly who he felt he was
being prevented from criticizing, but there was an article in The Guardian that same week
about his belief that Australia should not admit any Syrian refugees because they might
be terrorists.
So, I guess he felt he was being oppressed by refugees.
Whatever it was about, he responded by not just deleting that tweet, but all of his tweets,
and he did not tweet again for a while.
Elon Musk has, unsurprisingly, done it at least twice.
In November of 2022, Musk posted that he was so committed to free speech
that he would not ban the account that was posting information about his private plane.
He did actually ban the account a month later, but a user with a Doge meme profile picture
replied to that tweet,
"'So you don't rule over us, but for us. Much wow!'
accompanied by that same image that Thomas Massey posted, the big hand squishing the
little people with the text of the quote."
And Musk replied to the Doge meme guy,
"'That is my goal. After hundreds of commenters
immediately pointed out that he was agreeing with a quote from a neo-nazi,
he deleted the reply without addressing it. Six months later, he tweeted
the exact same picture. It was a screenshot from a meme page, so it was
the exact same image bearing the quote, but the text underneath it showed
someone had written, we need to rise up against children with leukemia.
I guess the joke there is that you aren't allowed to criticize
kids with cancer. That one's still up. I guess he thought
that was funny. And maybe it does kind of sound like something
Voltaire could have said, you know, he's not a huge fan of the
Jews either. But we don't exactly know where the original misattribution
to the French philosopher comes from.
American etymologist Barry Popik wrote on his blog in 2012
that the quote seemed to appear kind of out of nowhere
with multiple quote of the day websites
featuring it in 2012, all attributing it to Voltaire.
The oldest attribution to Voltaire that Popik could find,
super weird, was a 2007 post by a user named Suzanne on a forum for miniature horse breeders.
But I think that has more to do with sort of the rickety architecture of the early internet
than it is evidence that Suzanne and the mini horse ladies are anti-semites, right?
We don't really have the ability to Google a lot of that sort of early internet posting,
you know, Usenet forums and things like that weren't indexing to Google a lot of that sort of early internet posting, you know, Usenet forums and things
like that weren't indexing to Google, so I don't think it came from the mini-horse ladies.
But I will admit I spent half an afternoon digging through 20-year-old forum posts about
miniature horse pedigrees trying to sniff out secret Nazis.
I didn't find any.
Mostly I just discovered that some people buy the little
shoes at Build-A-Bear Workshop for their miniature horses because they fit perfectly and they're
cheaper than the little sneakers they make for horses. So if you need a little extra traction
if you're taking a miniature horse inside, you could put teddy bear sneakers on him.
But whoever started it, I find it hard to believe that the original misattribution was
innocent.
It's not a line you could really just come across anywhere on the wider internet if you
were the first person to do this.
And the actual author of the quote seems to agree.
In 2017, Kevin Strom addressed the issue, writing in a post on the website for the neo-Nazi
organization National Alliance.
Whoever hijacked my quote and put it over Voltaire's signature liked what I was saying.
He understood my point.
He understood that our secret rulers broke no criticism of themselves or their agenda
without exacting punishment.
He wanted to use the quote, but he didn't dare attribute it correctly.
He didn't dare make his point with a quote from a known racist or anti-Semite
– those are in scare quotes – no matter how good the quote was. He didn't dare follow
my thoughts with my name. If he did, he'd be attacked as being racist himself. There
might be personal or professional consequences, so he took my idea and put it in the mouth
of Voltaire. Funny thing is, Voltaire, free thinker and honest observer as he was, is
as much of a racist and anti-Semite as I am. But Voltaire has Funny thing is, Voltaire, free thinker and honest observer as he was, is as much
of a racist and anti-Semite as I am. But Voltaire has been safely dead for well over 200 years,
and his contribution to the artistic and intellectual development of our civilization is so great
that it will take quite some time for his legacy to be erased, denounced, or censored,
as I'm sure the enemies of life are aching to do. So it was relatively safe to quote
Voltaire. but unsafe to quote
Kevin Alfred Strome. Fair enough, I think Kevin's on to something there. You know,
I hate to agree with him. But it isn't just racism and anti-Semitism that makes Strome
an unsavory source to quote. He is also a pedophile. Now, I know you might be saying,
and I know the legal department is saying, that's kind of a strong word. Now I know you might be saying, and I know the legal department is saying,
that's kind of a strong word. Are you sure you can say that? Well, yeah, I can. I'm very sure.
Because despite the entire section of his website devoted to debunking the accusation,
one of the exhibits filed in the case that led to his stint in federal prison for possession of child
pornography is a copy of a contract he signed
in the presence of a notary.
In September 2006, at the request of his second wife, Kevin Strom signed a document stating
that he would attend counseling sessions, quote, until such time that such a qualified
counselor will be able to indicate to, redacted, that I am free from being sexually drawn to
children or drawn to sexually explicit material of any kind concerning children or any other characteristics of being a pedophile.
There's just a lot going on there. I mean, first of all, I don't know if you've had anything
notarized, right? You sign a document in the presence of someone who is certified by the state
to say they saw you sign it. So it's, you know, there's no argument later about whether that's
really you who signed it because you showed them your ID and they put the little you sign it. So it's, you know, there's no argument later about whether that's really you who signed it because you show them
your ID and they put the little stamp on it. I usually get stuff notarized at the library.
It's free. Your town probably has it too. You make a little appointment and the librarian can do it for you. It's great.
I love public libraries. I don't know where Kevin got his pedophile contract notarized. I just can't imagine.
Like normally you're looking at, I don't know, mortgage documents and wills, or I had to send a document to a court clerk to get online access to court records.
Like, did she read this? What a bad day at work.
There's nothing I can tell you that will make any sense of a man's sexual attraction to his stepdaughter's nine year old classmate.
That's... I can't do that. But I think there's some sense in telling you a little bit about Kevin's life up to that point. If you don't have the kind of
familiarity with white supremacist movements that ends conversations at
parties, you've probably never heard of him. But he spent most of his adult life
as the indispensable right hand of the man who wrote the novel that still
serves as a blueprint and a Bible for white supremacist terror.
By his own telling, it was his high school history teacher who set Kevin Strom on the
path to right-wing extremism, introducing him to the ultra-conservative anti-communist
group the John Birch Society in the early 70s.
And it's probably no coincidence that the two men who would have the biggest impact
on his views as an adult also came up through the JBS. Strom would later serve as the personal archivist of Robilo P. Oliver,
a founding member of the John Birch Society, although he was later forced to leave the group
he helped found in 1966 after saying, all the world's problems could be solved if every Jew
were vaporized. So it's not that the John Birch Society wasn't anti-Semitic,
they just didn't want him to say out loud
exactly how anti-Semitic they all were.
It was just very embarrassing for everyone.
And William Luther Pierce,
the man whose Nazi compound Stroom lived and worked on
for years, joined the American Nazi Party
after deciding the John Birch Society
just wasn't racist enough for him.
It was a place for people who hated communism to share ideas,
and a lot of those ideas were about how black
and Jewish people were actually to blame.
And it was at a John Birch Society meeting,
sometime in the late 70s, when Strom first encountered members
of the newly formed National Alliance.
William Luther Pierce founded National Alliance in 1974. After American
Nazi party leader George Lincoln Rockwell was shot in a laundromat parking
lot by a former follower in 67, Pierce had a brief stint in the National
Socialist White People's Party. That's kind of a mouthful, that's just a
different Nazi party. Before joining up with Willis Cardo to lead the National
Youth Alliance. And National Youth Alliance was formed by Carto to focus
on recruiting and radicalizing right-wing college students to sort of counter the influence
of groups like Students for a Democratic Society, right? So it's, it was the TP USA of the George
Wallace campaign years.
In the name of the greatest people that have ever trod this earth. I draw the line in the dust and toss
the gauntlet before the feet of tyranny and I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow,
and segregation forever.
And it was originally spun off of Cardo's Youth for Wallace organization, but obviously
George Wallace did not become president in 1968 and they didn't bring back segregation.
And in what is going to become a theme in this story, Cardo and Pierce pretty quickly
stopped getting along and eventually split entirely.
The faction that left with Pierce became National Alliance in 1974, and in 75, Pierce started writing the novel that is, unfortunately, his enduring legacy,
The Turner Diaries.
We don't have to get super deep into it today.
I'm sure it will come up in most episodes of this show, unfortunately.
You know, over the last 50 years, this book has inspired a lot of race warriors.
It is a fictional novel, but it's the handbook for the race war. It is a
race war handbook in a fictional trench coat. And it's not very good. And I don't, I mean,
obviously it's not good, right? It is a terrorism handbook. It is sort of describing how to instigate
the race war and, you know, kill the the race traders and kill the journalists and kill black people and Jewish people.
It is not good ideologically, obviously, but it's also just really bad.
It's messy.
It was originally written in a serialized format and then collected into one book and
it's just disjointed.
He's not a great writer.
He's not a great thinker.
And Kevin Strom's first wife, Kirsten, told an interviewer years later that when she first met
Pierce in 1987, she told him she had just finished reading the Turner Diaries. You know, there she's
at dinner with her husband and Dr. Pierce, and this is, I'm sure, a very big deal for her husband,
who is a National Alliance member. And I'm sure he hoped that his wife would just behave, you know,
keep sweet, just
be the wife.
And she tells Dr. Pierce, oh, I just finished reading your book and I didn't think it was
very good.
She told him it was poorly written.
And I mean, point for Kirsten, she's right.
I just can't imagine saying that to him.
And it was through Pierce that Strom first met Kirsten.
She was married at the time to a National Alliance member named Joseph McLaughlin.
In 1987, the day that Rudolf Hess died, Joe suggested that she call Pierce.
So I wish I could be a fly on the wall on this afternoon, you know, he says to his young wife,
Oh, I've just heard that the deputy Führer died.
We should call the leader of the Nazi cult that I'm in and offer our condolences.
I guess? But that's what they did. And Pierce was very happy to hear from them.
And as they're talking, he's thinking, you know, I think Kevin would really like this girl.
Again, she's married. She's on the phone with her husband. Her husband is the one that prompted her to make this phone call.
But he hears her and thinks,
I've got something better for her. Because I think it's hard to meet women when you're living in an off-the-grid Nazi compound in the mountains of West Virginia.
Pierce himself was known for selecting his brides from catalogs of Eastern European women.
But I guess he thought he could pick one out for his boy Kevin over in Arlington, you know, a little closer to home. A few months after
that dinner where she told Pierce she didn't care for his novel, Kirsten left
her second husband, Joe, and moved in with Kevin. The couple was married on
Chincoteague Island in 1990 in a ceremony officiated by William Luther
Pierce. She wrote later in her memoir, I guess, you know, she
wasn't fully sort of removed from society at this point. She was still
existing in the world when she married Kevin and so her family was at the
wedding and she describes feeling a little bit embarrassed at the way Dr.
Pierce talked about race in front of her family. Strange vows.
Strange Vows. than the kids. And rigged my house to explode. In a quiet suburb. This is the Beverly Hills of the valley. Before escaping into the wilderness.
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getting the sniper me out of some tree.
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and hiding somewhere.
For two years.
They won't tell you anything.
I've traveled the nation.
I'm going down in the cave.
Tracking down clues.
They were thinking that I picked him up
and took him somewhere.
Keep asking me this.
I'm gonna call the police and have you removed.
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on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. On September 17, 2009, 24-year-old Matrice Richardson was released from the Malibu Lost
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The marriage was not a happy one. That's probably not a surprise to you. Soon after the marriage,
they moved out to the land. Again, that the the big compound in West Virginia, and she didn't love it there. She wasn't
allowed to watch TV or read newspapers or consume any of what her husband
considered Jewish controlled media. They stockpiled food and weapons and she
mainly tended to her home and her children, but she says that she also
helped out around the compound by stuffing envelopes to mail out copies of the group's propaganda, help fulfill orders for books.
They sold Pierce's book, obviously, the Turner Diaries, and a number of other white nationalist
publications and books.
Another task that she would pitch in with was they made these special waterproof PVC
tubes that they would sell to members.
And the purpose of the tube is to bury your guns underground so the federal government
can't get them, right?
So she's raising her children, she's a housewife, she's making gun tubes for preppers and mailing
out copies of the terrorism manual, you know, just young mother stuff.
And the paranoia on the compound was always there.
I mean, why else are you living on a compound
if you're not a little bit paranoid?
But after Ruby Ridge in 92 and Waco in 93,
it became unbearable as she describes
that, you know, Kevin telling her things like,
you know, keep the children away from the windows,
they're gonna shoot the children through the windows,
just not prompted by anything, right?
Just the sort of constant tension that the feds are gonna show up children through the windows, just not prompted by anything, right? Just the sort of constant tension
that the feds are gonna show up on any day now
and they're gonna shoot you.
You're gonna shoot you like Ruby Ridge.
It's just not a great environment for a family.
And on April 19th, 1995,
Kevin came home early from work.
And she said he never did that.
He was never around.
He would go off to his little workroom to make his little Nazi radio show for, you know,
dawn to dusk every day.
He never came home early.
But on April 19th, 1995, he did.
I don't know if that date means anything to normal people.
It was the day of the Oklahoma City bombing.
And when he came home from work that day, on April 19th, he didn't know yet.
It hadn't hit the news yet what the police found with Timothy McVeigh in the car.
When he was arrested, he had his favorite passages from the Turner Diaries on the car
seat next to him.
But he did know that the bomber had called the National Alliance office just before detonating
the bomb that killed 200 people. Christian writes in her
memoir that Kevin came home early from work again the next day, April 20th, 1995. He came home in a
hurry and he started packing up boxes and boxes of documents and tapes and papers and reel-to-reel
recordings of his pirate radio broadcast Voice of, and all of his QSL cards.
If you're a ham radio guy, don't come for me.
I'm going to do my best here.
QSL cards are mostly a thing of the past now that we have the internet, but they were these
sort of postcards that ham radio enthusiasts and people in the Pirate Radio community would
send through the mail to exchange information about signal quality and strength.
You'd write, you know, I am in this location.
I was listening to this broadcast on this date and this was the signal quality and strength. You'd write, you know, I am in this location, I was listening to this broadcast on this date, and this was the signal quality. And in the pirate radio
world, these QSL cards are real collector's items. But they're also a paper trail that
the FCC would love to have. It's sort of a record of what you're listening to, who
you're communicating with. And he's been running an illegal anti-Semitic radio show
for years. Anyway, those are QSL cards, I think.
And Kirsten said he burned the boxes of QSL cards.
So he's packing up all these documents.
He's burning the cards.
And then he fills the car up with these boxes
of documents and tapes.
And he drives several hours away to Stanton, Virginia
and drives all over town, leaving these boxes in different dumpsters in businesses.
So I guess in April of 1995, the Big Lots dumpster
received potential evidence in the Oklahoma City bombing.
Who knows?
And the worst thing really was that it ruined
Hitler's birthday, which was usually a very lively occasion
on the compound.
It wasn't long after the bombing that the couple moved to Rochester, Minnesota.
They chose it because it was 96% white, of course.
It was in Rochester where Kirsten gave birth to their third child, and it was pretty clear
that she was suffering from what was probably postpartum depression.
She describes an incident just weeks after giving birth when she was allowed to listen
to a little bit of the radio to hear a weather report.
And she caught the tail end of a news story about a young couple that killed their baby
in a hotel room to cover up the fact that they'd gotten pregnant.
And that's upsetting for anyone to hear, but I think if you're a brand new mother, that's
overwhelming, right?
So she's a new mother, she's holding her baby, she hears about a
baby that died, and she starts crying. I think there's nothing more normal in the world than
to cry when you hear about a dead baby, but Kevin yelled at her. He rebuked her for this, saying it
was good that the baby was dead because its mother was Jewish. And it wasn't long after that that she
finally got up the courage to read a magazine article about the Oklahoma City bombing. She,
you know, obviously had very little access to media and was afraid to find out more about this anyway.
She picked up a magazine and she's leafing through it and she sees pictures.
And she told an interviewer later,
I was thinking about this child being held by a fireman.
Doesn't look any different than my son.
And he's covered with blood.
And that whole idea that there really isn't any difference, that children are children,
all came to me, it all came together on that date.
And it was around this time that Kirsten spent some time in a psychiatric hospital.
Can't really blame her.
I can't imagine trying to integrate that into my psyche.
And she'd been begging for help for years, but Kevin didn't believe in that kind of thing.
She'd been prescribed antidepressants
after the birth of their second child,
but he hadn't allowed her to take them.
While she was in the hospital,
he left her and took the children.
A years long custody battle followed.
And even though he is an out and out neo-Nazi, right?
This is, it's not a secret at this point.
His name is in the newspaper next to William Luther Pierce
and Timothy McVeigh.
He's the protege of the man who wrote the book
that inspired the Oklahoma safe bombing.
He has no real job outside of editing a Nazi magazine
and ghost writing for David Duke.
In spite of all of that, the battle ended in a draw.
Years in court, right?
She was only able to keep fighting this custody battle
because the SPLC helped her get a lawyer. And I think at some point she sold photographs
that she had taken of other National Alliance members on the compound. She sold them to
the SPLC for enough money to just keep trying. But shared custody. And so at the end of those
three years in court, Kevin was already married to his second wife, Alicia.
And it was Alicia who came home one day
to find her husband, Kevin, sitting in front of his computer.
He was completely nude and fully erect.
And I'm so, I don't love having to say that.
I mean, I guess I chose to say it.
I did write this, but I don't like the way that feels.
But he was at his computer, naked, rock hard,
and looking at pictures of little girls,
clothed girls, the girls had clothes on, right?
He had access to child pornography.
We know that.
But on that particular day, she walked in on him looking at what,
under other circumstances, would have been perfectly normal photographs of children.
These were children they knew, right? Family, friends, the children of other National Alliance
members, photos he'd taken of children in their lives, friends of her daughters. But it wasn't
normal because of the, you know, the totality
of the circumstances here. And that's what prompted the pedophilia contract. Because
she'd already caught him looking at actual child pornography the year before, so she
already, she already knew. But this, this was a bridge too far. These were children
that he had access to, right?
When she caught him the year before,
looking at the child pornography,
they'd started going to marriage counseling.
But this was too much.
She decided he needed individual counseling
to address this specifically.
And she later testified that it was at this point
that she started sleeping on the floor
outside her daughter's bedroom.
And his marriage was not the only thing in Kevin's life that was falling apart in 2006.
After William Luther Pierce died in 2002, National Alliance was thrown into chaos.
His handpicked successor, Eric Glebe, was losing control of the organization.
In 2004, National Alliance's membership coordinator quit, leaving behind a public
letter demanding an audit of the organization's finances, accusing Gleib of mismanaging member dues.
In April of 2005, Strom attempted a coup of sorts, getting dozens of signatures on a letter
demanding Gleib's resignation.
Gleib responded by firing him.
Fair enough.
But then he did actually step down just a few days after that, leaving Sean Walker in
charge of National Alliance.
And you know, another sort of tangent here, Glebe would actually return as chairman just
a year later because Sean Walker, the guy that took over for him when he quit, had to
go to prison on a gun thing.
So it's really just kind of a revolving door.
Nobody really knows who's in charge here.
But Kevin's out.
But if there's one thing these guys love, it is a splinter group. So Kevin responds to being fired from the organization he'd
devoted his entire adult life to by founding his own. And he called it National Vanguard,
which is the same as the publication he'd been editing for National Alliance for years.
So he already was using the name National Vanguard because that was National Alliance's publication that he was in charge of so he already owned a domain. Easy for him.
And some National Alliance chapters followed him. So he's pretty busy trying
to helm his newly formed Splinter Group. He's traveling to chapters in different
states trying to shore up support, he's speaking, he's meeting, recruiting, and
he's just trying to get this thing off the ground. But he's not so busy that he can't make time to see the new love of his life.
A nine year old.
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Hi, it's Andrea Gunning, host of Betrayal.
I'm excited to announce that the Betrayal podcast is expanding.
We are going to be releasing episodes weekly, every Thursday.
Each week you'll hear brand new stories, firsthand accounts of shocking deception, broken trust,
and the trail of destruction left behind.
Stories about regaining a sense of safety, a handle on reality after your entire
world is flipped upside down. From unbelievable romantic betrayals, the love that was so real
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oh well, he is a sociopath.
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This is not even the part
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And life or death deceptions.
She's practicing how she's gonna cry
when the police calls her after they kill me.
Listen to Betrayal Weekly on the iHeartRadio app,
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podcasts.
The podium is back with fresh angles and deep dives into Olympic and Paralympic stories
you know, and those you'll be hard pressed to forget.
I did something in 88 that hasn't been beaten.
Oh gosh, the US Olympic trials is the hardest and most competitive meet in the world.
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Listen to The Podium on the iHeart app
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like you've never quite heard them before.
New from Double Asterisk and iHeart Podcasts,
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In September 2005, Kevin met one of his stepdaughter's elementary school classmates.
A girl identified in court documents only as AA, which thankfully are not her real initials.
She was nine at the time.
And all set your mind at ease up front.
He never touched her.
There's no allegation that he ever touched a child.
So that's some consolation, I think.
And none of the naked photos of children they found on his hard drive were of her, right?
Again, there's no allegation that he ever took photos of children who were naked.
He just was weird about taking photos of clothed children.
But he showed up at her school so many times
that her parents pulled her out of private school
and sent her back to public school.
He drove by her house.
He sent her flowers and gifts,
and he wrote poems and love songs.
And ultimately, the charge of sexual enticement of a minor,
which is one of the things he was originally charged with,
was dismissed. Judge Norman Moon, who is shockingly still on the bench. I saw Judge Moon not too long ago, said
there was overwhelming evidence that Strom was attracted to the girl, but that there wasn't
sufficient evidence that he'd actually tried to sexually coerce her, right? So he's trying to
romance this child, but he didn't sexually coerce her,
right? He's buying her flowers and showing up at her house, but he didn't physically
coerce her. And I don't, I don't know. I don't know where the line is there. I just,
I'm not comfortable with that. If a grown man is hiding behind a tree outside of an
elementary school, trying to get close to the child, he's writing poems about marrying, there's gotta be something we could do about that, right?
I don't know.
If a guy is taking time out of his busy schedule meeting with David Duke and writing blog posts
about racial purity to download a little girl's school schedule, there's gotta be some kind of intervention.
But even though Judge Moon said it wasn't illegal to send romantic gifts to a fifth
grader, the behavior did prompt an investigation.
His wife is rightly very concerned.
They start going to counseling.
She catches him looking at child pornography and tries to call the police.
And so here, this is a little he said she said, right?
So they both agree that there was an altercation.
She says that she hit him because she was trying to call the police and then he tried
to stop her by choking her.
This is where the witness intimidation charge comes in that was ultimately dropped at trial.
But regardless of how it started, she hit him over the head with a phone so hard that
he had to go to the hospital.
So they go back to marriage counseling.
In July 2006, he announces he's taking a step back from his new Nazi splinter group, citing family issues.
You know, the classic line, I've got to take a step back from the work to spend more time with my family.
In this case, it doesn't seem like spending more time with his family is really in anybody's best interest.
But he abandons National Vanguard.
He just doesn't have time for it right now.
And a month after that, unbeknownst to him, his wife gives his computer hard drive to the police.
In October, federal agents search his home.
And notably, the FBI agents that come to search his house are from the Joint
Terrorism Task Force.
I don't know that child sex abuse material usually involves the JTTF, but
in this case, it did.
And specifically, the agent on the warrant was a Charlottesville police
officer on loan to the task force.
Did I mention that this all takes place in Charlottesville?
It's just, it doesn't seem right, does it?
But the agent on the warrant is Charlottesville police officer who is on loan to the JTTF,
Brian O'Donnell.
And Alicia, that's Kevin's wife at the time, claimed very publicly and for years that she
was sleeping with O'Donnell at the time of the trial.
And she even produced audio that she claims is a recording of a phone call between the
two of them where they're talking about the affair.
I won't tell you with certainty that she was sleeping with the cop in charge of investigating
her pedophile husband.
He has not admitted that.
I think he has denied that.
But that was her claim for many years.
For what it's worth, she was later arrested several times
for stalking and doxing cops.
Here in the Charlottesville area,
we have what's called the Jefferson Area
Drug Enforcement Task Force.
It's a multi-jurisdictional drug enforcement unit.
And she ran a blog devoted to doxing the undercover cops
that did drug stings.
So again, you know, you don't gotta hand it to her.
She is not innocent in all of this. She was, you know, you don't gotta hand it to her. She is not
innocent in all of this. She was a true believer, just like Kevin, but I don't know, running
the cop doxxing blog? Not bad. Eventually the ACLU actually took up her case, defending
her right to run a blog dedicated to identifying undercover drug officers. She spent a little
bit of time in jail, but I think ultimately she was vindicated in her cop
doxing blog.
It's just such a weird rabbit hole here.
It's just such a strange side tangent that has nothing to do with Kevin because he's out of her
life at this point, right?
But just a weird crossover.
I wish I could go back in time and see Tim Longo, the Charlottesville police chief back
then.
He met with Alicia and just begged her, he's like, I can't, I can't make you, right?
You're not breaking the law.
We settled that, but please, please log off.
Please stop posting pictures of cops, houses and cars.
It's upsetting the boys.
Just bizarre.
Another strange crossover, just totally bizarre.
I guess it's just a quirk of small town life, but it's one of her many trials.
The prosecutor was Denise Lunsford.
She was, back then, in the prosecutor's office in Almerall County.
After working as a prosecutor, she would go back to defense work,
and she was actually the court-appointed defense attorney at the James Alex Fields murder trial.
So just everything comes full circle, I guess. And O'Donnell, the officer
working Strom's case for the JTTF, again, he denied the affair. He says he was not sleeping
with Alicia, but he actually stayed on at the Charlottesville Police Department for another
decade or so, long enough to serve as one of the Zone Commanders for the police presence in downtown
Charlottesville on August 12, 2017.
I'm not saying any of this to like start a conspiracy. There's really no conspiracy here.
It's just a quirk of a little city.
Characters getting recycled.
But circling back, I digress.
That JTTF involvement in this small town child pornography case
is what fuels Strom's personal conspiracy theory that he was set up.
He maintains to this day that he was targeted by the JTTF because they were unhappy with
him for his coverage of the 2004 federal trial of Chester Dolez.
Of all the things to think that this is about, I think that's just so stupid.
Dolez was a longtime Klansman, but by the early 2000s was in leadership at National
Alliance and he was on trial for some kind of federal gun charge.
He did something silly.
He was a felon for some prior hate crimes.
He wasn't supposed to have a gun.
He did go to prison again.
Got back out.
He tried to run for office in Georgia two years ago?
Anyway, Strom attended the trial to support Dole's, obviously, as
a National Alliance member, and he was also writing about the case for National Alliance's
website to sort of help boost awareness of the case because they were raising money for
Dole's family. But Strome says that at the courthouse, a JGTF agent looked at him and
said, Strome, you're next. Right? So he thinks that they hated his blog so much that they tried to send him to prison?
I know I'm saying that like it's so stupid when I just told you that like
his wife wrote a blog that was so bad the cops tried to send her to jail,
but I just don't think the FBI cared that much about his blog. I really don't.
Because I've got a different theory.
I found, buried in this mountain of documents produced pursuant to a FOIA request
by DDoS Secrets founder Emma Best,
an FBI memo dated April 18th, 2005.
Remember, that's the week of Kevin's attempted coup.
So he's trying to seize control of National Alliance
from Eric Gleib, but instead he gets fired
and he splinters off National Vanguard.
So in this FBI memo, which was written just days before all of that happened, the agent writes,
National Alliance fracturing continued and accelerated this weekend.
And the agent speculates that a splinter group led by a former staffer is likely to form.
And he actually writes a name, but it's redacted, obviously. But based on the character widths,
I can't think of another guy whose name would fit. It's a Kevin Strom length redaction,
if you know what I'm saying. The memo's author advises agents to assess the potential of a
lone wolf acting out of frustration over the lack of progress that organized groups have been able to make in their goals.
And the document concludes by saying, quote, to some degree, I believe that National Alliance
had a stabilizing effect on the majority of its members.
And with the growing instability of the organization, individual actions by these people will become
more difficult to anticipate and certainly more difficult to cover with sources.
So if you don't speak cop, what he's saying is that the collapse of a group that size,
which had long relied on the somewhat stabilizing effect of a charismatic leader, would make
it harder to infiltrate, harder to monitor, and harder to predict.
And some of these guys might do terrorism.
Right? That if this group collapses, if they don't have the stability and the framework
of a leader keeping them in line, they're gonna blow stuff up.
And the FBI already had an idea about Stroh. Right?
It was sort of an open secret for years that he was a little weird about little girls.
His ex-wife Kirsten spoke to the FBI years earlier, though it's not clear what specific
allegations she made about his proclivities.
In the 90s, he maintained a personal website with an entire section dedicated to the beauty
of the white race.
Which like, I mean, normal enough for a Nazi, right? Like the beauty of the Aryan woman or whatever, like a Pinterest board for the 14 words.
But it was weirder than that, right?
Even at the time and even within the movement, it raised eyebrows because the pictures were
not of adult women, right?
It was the beauty of Aryan little girls.
Again, clothed, but weird.
Just kind of freak behavior.
And Kirsten wrote in her memoir, which was published years before his arrest.
She's not writing this after she already knows.
She's writing this prior to his arrest.
That during their custody battle, she actually went to the police about that section of his
website.
And the police agreed that it was
super unsettling, but that ultimately it was not illegal because the girls were clothed.
She said in an interview later that Alicia, the second wife, called her after Kevin got
arrested. She said that for the first two years of her marriage, she tried to figure
out what was wrong with her. And for the second two years, she tried to figure out what was wrong with him.
The fact is, he wasn't interested in me either once we got married.
You know, often when someone gets arrested for something like this, people come out of
the woodwork and they say, oh, I always knew something was kind of weird about that guy.
I always knew.
Why didn't she say anything, first of all?
But in this case, we have sources
that predate his arrest, so this isn't a hindsight thing. People were saying this for years.
Some posts on a white nationalist message board in 2003 discussed the photos, even.
One user writes, Back some years ago when Strom first came on the internet, he ran a
series of pictures of young white girls, which some people found objectionable. But I did not. They weren't naked or in suggestive
poses or anything like that. And what the hell is wrong with celebrating the beauty
of the women of our race? Even the other Nazis pushed back against that. They're like, I
don't know, man. The photos were of the children of other National Alliance members, right?
These aren't just random pictures of kids
He found online. These aren't stock photos. These are photos he took of children in his life
Would photograph children playing on the compound and post them online without their parents permission, which is weird enough
But the website also had another section. So this is on a separate page of the website, but it's on the website
There were also photos of himself another section, so this is on a separate page of the website, but it's on the website.
There were also photos of himself posing in what the users on the message board call beefcake
poses in underwear that they describe as fruit of the looms.
I'm so, again, I'm so sorry.
Another exasperated user wrote, Why? Why do these things happen?
Why even under the best of circumstances is the movement always tainted with just a slight
tinge of cadaverine smell?
Why are we constantly confronted with this kind of just plain weird behavior?
Even among those who claim to be, and to our reluctant agreement usually, are the best people we've
got. Why can't we have so much as one single leader who is just simply normal? Why must
there always be these little weird kibbles and bits, these little oddities, these little
bits of quirky behavior lurking in the background of everything we do? Why must we always hold
our breath around our leaders, never knowing what horrible surprise lurks in their past, waiting to spring out and piss all over everything
like a giggling deranged baby? Why do we even bother? Is this really, truly the best we
can do?"
And to that I say, I think so. Yeah, I think it is the best they can do. The movement is
full of aspiring Hitlers, but they're all just absolute fucking weirdos,
even aside from the whole Nazi thing.
So if the FBI wanted to take out one head of this Hydra
to cut off the potential for this splinter group
to further split one of the country's
more powerful white supremacist organizations,
it wouldn't be hard, right?
I'm saying that these two things exist separately.
He was already a pedophile.
They had an existing desire to prevent this splinter group from taking hold.
And they just kind of lucked out, right?
Like if the cops might come after you, don't do them a favor by doing other crimes.
Like if you're a mob boss, pay your taxes, right? Who knows?
We do know Alicia turned over that hard drive to the police, but it's impossible to know
if she did that of her own volition or if she'd been approached by agents looking to
get him on something, right? Both of those are very easy to believe. He was horrible
to her. You know, by her account, he tried to choke her.
He's looking at child pornography.
She's afraid for her daughter.
I think that even on its own is enough motivation for even a true believer, a member of the
movement to say something has to be done.
This isn't acceptable.
But it's also very easy to believe that the FBI would approach her and say, you know,
we can help you if you help us. Who knows? We'll never know. She would say that she never
did that, right? She says that she didn't give any information to the police, but we know that's not
true because it's in court documents that she voluntarily produced the hard drive. So we'll
never really get a straight answer.
You know, he really just stepped on a rake here, you know. Maybe the feds never would have gotten involved at all.
If not for a little girl's mother who called the police because some weird middle-aged man
wouldn't stop showing up at her daughter's school.
Ultimately, Strom did plead guilty to one count of possessing child pornography
and was sentenced to 23 months.
With the year he'd already served before pleading guilty, one count of possessing child pornography and was sentenced to 23 months.
With the year he'd already served before pleading guilty, he was released just a few
months later, in September of 2008.
And Strom was sort of in the wilderness for a bit after his stint in prison.
By 2013, though, he was back in it with National Alliance.
He registered an account under his own name on the group's online forum.
In the following year, Gleib steps down, again, leaving William White Williams, the head of
National Alliance.
And he's still in charge over there today of what's left of it.
And yes, that is William White Williams.
That is his name.
William W. Williams.
Not to be confused with William White, that is a Nazi for a different day,
I promise though. We'll get to William White.
Anyway, Williams. He was a longtime Strom ally, so he brings him back into the fold
and reinstates him as the group's media director. And he also introduced Strom to the
woman who would become his third wife, Meredith Keller.
And Keller started writing to Williams in 2012
when she was still an undergraduate in college
and Williams introduced her to Strowm soon after.
So just as William Luther Pierce had selected Kirsten
for Kevin back in 1987,
the Alliance's new chairman is playing matchmaker again.
And Kevin's like 50 at this point
and she is just graduating college.
So not illegal, so it's not
illegal but it is weird.
It is weird.
And under the pseudonym Vanessa Neubauer, Meredith served as the secretary for the Cosmotheist
Church, that's the fake Nazi religion that William Luther Pierce invented to get tax-exempt
status after the IRS said no the first time in 1978.
Strom's engagement to Meredith was announced in an October 2015
member newsletter, but a police report two months later says she
called the police when he wouldn't let her leave the house
when she tried to end their relationship.
No charges were filed and I guess the police having to come
because you're holding a woman hostage isn't a probation
violation because there's no documentation in his federal police having to come because you're holding a woman hostage isn't a probation violation
because there's no documentation in his federal court file that he had a police contact of
this sort.
Who knows?
So he didn't get in trouble and they didn't break up.
The couple attended one of the last Trump campaign rallies together just two weeks before
the 2016 election.
In a broadcast of American Dissidentident voices that week, Strong opined
that Trump had opened the door for a full-on Hitler to emerge in the not-too-distant future,
ending the broadcast with optimism at the speed with which the Overton window was shifting
rightward, saying,
"...never before has the window of topics open for public debate been moved so far and
so fast in our direction. Kevin and Meredith married in 2019.
There were some rumors of the weird corners of the internet
that Strom had wanted to move his new family back
to the compound in West Virginia,
but everybody kind of said no to that.
Not because they didn't want a convicted sex offender
around the families that live there.
No, that wasn't a big deal.
They don't think he was guilty, right?
He was railroaded.
It was fake.
Whatever.
But because of his mandatory sex offender registration, that would mean that a photograph
of the compound would appear on the sex offender registry website, and people weren't comfortable
with that.
I don't know if that's true.
I guess I shouldn't repeat internet rumors.
But take it with a grain of salt.
The couple lived for several years in a home provided to him by a supporter from New Jersey
before purchasing a house a few hours north of the compound in a town outside of Pittsburgh.
She gave birth to their third child together, his sixth, last summer.
As of last September, Strom is no longer under supervision and no longer appears on
the Sex Offender Registry.
He and his wife appear as signatories on documents filed with the Pocahontas County Clerk in
West Virginia, approving the lease of some land owned by the Cosmotheus Church to a third
party in 2018.
He still hosts American Dissident Voices, the weekly broadcast he started in 1991, and
still posts
regularly on the website of the Foundering Neo-Nazi Organization that he's given his
life to.
So Voltaire didn't say it.
A lifelong adherent to the teachings of one of America's most influential Nazi leaders
said it from a little bunker in the mountains of West Virginia. Just a weird little guy who, according to one ex-wife,
was known to disappear for hours, locked in the bathroom,
eating pickles in the bathtub.
Weird Little Guys is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonedmedia.com, or check us out on the
iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jon Walczak, host of the new podcast, Missing in Arizona.
And I'm Robert Fisher, one of the most wanted men in the world.
We cloned his voice using AI.
In 2001, police say I killed my family and rigged my house to explode before escaping
into the wilderness.
Police believe he is alive and hiding somewhere.
Join me.
I'm going down in the cave.
As I track down clues.
I'm going to call the police and have you removed.
Hunting.
One of the most dangerous fugitives in the world.
Robert Fischer.
Do you recognize my voice?
Listen to Missing in Arizona every Wednesday
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your favorite shows.
Hi, it's Andrea Gunning, the host of Betrayal.
I'm excited to announce that the Betrayal podcast
is expanding.
We are going
to be releasing episodes weekly, every Thursday. Each week you'll hear brand new stories, first-hand
accounts of shocking deception, broken trust, and the trail of destruction left behind.
Listen to Betrayal Weekly on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
The podium is back with fresh angles and deep dives into Olympic and Paralympic stories
you know, and those you'll be hard pressed to forget.
I did something in 88 that hasn't been beaten.
Oh gosh, the U.S. Olympic trials is the hardest and most competitive meet in the world.
We are athletes.
We're going out there smashing into each other full force.
Listen to The Podium on the iHeart app or your favorite podcast platform weekly and
every day during the games to hear the Olympics like you've never quite heard them before.
In the early morning hours of September 6, 2016, St. Louis rapper and activist Darren Seals was found murdered.
That's what they gonna learn.
Own for death, own for nothing.
Every day Darren would tell her,
All right, Ma, be prepared.
They are going to try to kill me.
All episodes available now.
Listen to After the Uprising, The Murder of Darren Seals
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
From iHeart Podcasts comes, Does This Murder Make Me Look Gay?
911, what's your emergency?
My Stavante is dead!
Featuring the star-studded talents of Michael Urie, Jonathan Freeman,
Frankie Grande, Cheyenne Jackson, Robin de Jesus, and Kate McKinnon
as Angela Lansferries. Lick em, lick those toesies.
Listen to Does This Murder Make Me Look Gay? as part of the Outspoken Network,
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.