
Editor’s note: Lisa Scagliotti is a reporter with waterburyroundabout.org, an online news site covering Waterbury.
Graffiti identified with a white supremacist hate group was discovered this week painted on the side of the Waterbury Dam. The Vermont State Police are investigating the incident.
โThe graffiti was discovered by a worker at the dam this week,โ Trooper Neil Carey said in a news release Wednesday. โThe graffiti was painted on the east side of the dam, a location that has little visibility to the public and is not viewable from the water.โ
The discovery was reported to police on Wednesday, police said.
The statement did not provide details of any messages contained in the graffiti. It was identified as coming from the hate group Patriot Front, police said.
State Police spokesman Adam Silverman said the images included the groupโs name in large letters and a fist symbol associated with the group.
Carey said it appeared to have been applied using a stencil, โallowing the offender to apply the images quickly then leave.โ
The area where the vandalism occurred has no video surveillance. There are no known witnesses or suspects, police said.
Police released a photograph with Careyโs report showing the areas where the graffiti was removed on Wednesday by workers from the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources. Silverman said no photos of the original vandalism would be released.
โThe photos we have are part of the ongoing investigation, so we wonโt be able to release them at this time,โ he said.
Silverman added that he hoped news organizations would refrain from publishing such images โto avoid amplifying the white supremacist messages and giving the hate group exactly what it wants.โ
The nonprofit Southern Poverty Law Center monitors the activities of more than 1,600 domestic hate groups and extremists including the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazi organizations. It describes the Patriot Front as a white nationalist hate group that broke off from Vanguard America following the deadly โUnite the Rightโ rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, on August 12, 2017.
โPatriot Front focuses on theatrical rhetoric and activism that can be easily distributed as propaganda for its chapters across the country,โ the Southern Poverty Law Center website says. โPF was one of a number of hate groups that sought to recast itself as mainstream, patriotic Americans by dressing up their propaganda and rhetoric in Americana.โ
The Waterbury Dam graffiti comes just one month after stickers promoting Patriot Front turned up in Hinesburg.
On June 1 and June 4 Hinesburg Police Chief Anthony Cambridge took to social media to report that stickers from Patriot Front were found in several locations in the community. He said the group and its messaging were not welcome.
โWe will not tolerate any form of racism period,โ Cambridge wrote. โThe Hinesburg Police Department wants to stress that we do NOT support, nor will we tolerate, any Patriot Front stickers being placed around our town.โ
One of the instances involved a sticker โstrategically placedโ on a pride flag at the United Church of Hinesburg, Cambridge said. Defacing public property is considered vandalism, he said.
The flag incident takes it a step further, he added. โThe person(s) responsible will be charged as committing a hate crime,โ he wrote.
So far, no arrests have been made in the Hinesburg cases.
The stickers and graffiti in Hinesburg and Waterbury match the Southern Poverty Law Centerโs description of Patriot Frontโs tactics. It says that the group whose manifesto calls for the creation of a โwhite ethnostateโ typically engages in activism such as anonymously posting flyers or dropping banners off buildings or overpasses.
โWhen PF orchestrates protests or public appearances, they are typically tightly choreographed and scripted to maximize propaganda value,โ the center explains.
State police have informed the Vermont Attorney Generalโs Office about the incident under the Bias Incident Reporting System, a protocol created in 2019 following an investigation into racial harassment of former state representative Kiah Morris of Bennington.
The system encourages law enforcement and prosecutors to share reports of bias incidents with the Civil Rights Unit of the Attorney Generalโs Office for potential civil investigation and remedy.
The Waterbury incident on Thursday drew a rebuke from the national American Muslim civil rights organization, The Council on American-Islamic Relations. It issued a statement condemning the graffiti in Vermont as well as an incident in Nebraska.
โCommunity responses to hate incidents must show that we all stand against bigotry and that we will not allow displays of racism in our communities,โ said council spokeswoman Ayan Ajeen. She said the organization and the American Muslim community stand โin solidarity with all those challenging anti-Black racism and white supremacy.โ
The other incident the group referenced involved Nazi swastikas and other racist symbols painted on grass at a park in Omaha and discovered on June 30.
Vermont State Police are asking the public for assistance in their investigation of the Waterbury incident. Anyone with information is asked to contact the state police in Middlesex at 802-229-9191.
