Editor’s Note: This story includes mention of potentially triggering situations, including hateful language and antisemitism.
On Saturday, Dec. 6, Bloomington resident Zachary Platter was cited after participating in a neo-Nazi protest in Little Rock, Arkansas. The neo-Nazi group marched in front of the Arkansas State Capitol and Little Rock Central High School, a civil rights site.
Platter, 36, is the only member of the group facing criminal offense, according to a police incident report. He drove the U-Haul box truck that transported members of the neo-Nazi group from the scene of the demonstration and was cited for allowing people to ride in space not for passengers, an unclassified misdemeanor.
Bodycam footage from the stop shows police writing Platter a ticket and requesting that the men remove their masks and provide identification. During the stop, members chanted “Heil Hitler” and raised their arms in a Nazi salute.
Platter’s arraignment took place at 10 a.m. Wednesday, during which he pleaded not guilty. Another Indiana resident was one of the group members in the truck, though he was not cited.
The neo-Nazi group marched outside the capitol, then walked to the high school, where they carried a banner that said “race mixing is communism,” a phrase commonly used by Arkansas segregationists who were against the Little Rock Nine’s 1957 desegregation of the school.
The neo-Nazi group, known as Blood Tribe, was founded by former U.S. Marine and Kentucky resident Christopher Pohlhaus in 2022. Pohlhaus was one of the 22 people identified in the Little Rock Police Department’s incident reports
According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, the Blood Tribe is known for leading rallies against non-white immigration and for disrupting LGBTQ+ protests. The group also played an early role in promoting the claim that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were eating domestic pets. The false claim gained attention during the 2024 presidential election.

