Elliott Kline
Elliott Kline, also known as Eli Mosley, is an American neo-Nazi and military impostor. He is the former leader of Identity Evropa, and was a prominent organizer in the alt-right movement between 2017 and 2018. He was also a key figure behind the August 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, which was one of several neo-Nazi rallies that Kline helped organize.
The [New York Times|The ''New York Times''] revealed in February 2018 that Kline had lied about his military service. Specifically, Kline had pretended to be a combat veteran of Iraq when in fact he had been stationed in Pennsylvania throughout his time in the military. Following the revelation of his lie, Kline withdrew from political activism.
Early life
Kline grew up in Reading, Pennsylvania. He graduated from Wilson [High School |Wilson High School] in 2010 then attended several colleges before dropping out without obtaining a degree. He later joined the Pennsylvania National Guard, where he served for about six years.Alt-right activism
Kline's pseudonym of Eli Mosley was inspired by British fascist Oswald Mosley. Kline joined the Proud Boys in 2016. He helped organize the 2017 white supremacist Unite the Right rally. After Kline condemned a tweet by Jason Kessler, who wrote that the counterprotester killed at the rally in a car attack deserved to die, Kessler tweeted that, "There is an individual who has done a coordinated smear job on me, from within the movement; that person is Eli Mosley, Elliott Kline. From the beginning he was fucking things up."Kline became the head of Identity Evropa in August 2017. At the same time, Kline took a position as a writer for the neo-Nazi Daily Stormer, for which he promoted racial hatred and conspiracy theories about Jews.
In order to bolster his reputation, throughout his time in the alt-right movement Kline claimed that he had deployed to and fought in Iraq, when in fact his unit never left the state of Pennsylvania during his service. The lie was exposed in a February 2018 New York Times report, and Kline subsequently withdrew from political activism.