John Patler
John Christ Patsalos, formerly known as John Patler, is an American former neo-Nazi and cartoonist who was convicted of the August 25, 1967, assassination of American Nazi Party leader George Lincoln Rockwell. He was formerly close to Rockwell and worked on producing the ANP's propaganda, particularly cartoons, in their publications.
Born in New York City in 1938, Patsalos had a violent childhood, with his father killing his mother when he was five years old. He was convicted of several crimes in his youth and treated for mental health issues. He expressed antisemitic attitudes by his late teens, and joined the neo-Nazi group the American Nazi Party in 1960. He was an artist and graphic designer for the ANP's periodicals. Patler briefly left the ANP in 1961 and formed a similarly named splinter group, the American National Party, with his close friend Dan Burros, as well as a neo-Nazi magazine, Kill! He and Burros had a falling out a year later and in 1962 Patler returned to the ANP.
Patler's ethnic Greek heritage caused some strife within the party and contributed to a minor schism between those neo-Nazis who advocated a more expansive idea of "master race", and the "Hitler purists" who viewed this as heretical. Patler idolized Rockwell but also blamed him for the problems in Patler's life caused by his adherence to neo-Nazism. Rockwell eventually kicked him out of the party for his instability, and causing division in March 1967. Patler murdered Rockwell in August of that year, and received a sentence of 20 years in prison for first degree murder. He was paroled in 1975, though returned to prison after violating his parole. He later left the neo-Nazi movement.
Early life
John Christ Patsalos was born in New York City on January 6, 1938. His father, Christ Patsalos, was a Greek immigrant, while his mother Athena Patsalos was ethnically Greek but born in New York. The elder Patsalos was in his forties, while Mavroglan was newly 20 when they married. Patsalos's younger brother, George, was born in 1939. His childhood was violent and his father was regularly antisemitic. When Patsalos was five, in 1943, his father shot and killed his mother at their home, believing she was flirting with other men. His father was convicted of manslaughter. His children were put in their maternal grandmother's custody. His father was released on parole after less than 10 years. Shortly after, Patsalos's grandmother died, after which Christ Patsalos reclaimed custody of his children. Patsalos had grown to despise his father, and after moving in with him turned to a series of petty crimes and acts of destruction.After Patsalos was convicted for car theft, he was put on probation; after violating it he was remanded by the juvenile court to the Morrisania Hospital Mental Hygiene Clinic due to a failure to socially adjust and for being a "chronic truant". When he was evaluated his caseworker noted his antisemitism and "tense and sullen" mood. He was diagnosed as paranoid, and at the age of 18 in 1956 a psychiatrist noted down in his file that he was a "potential murderer". Patsalos received court-mandated outpatient treatment and was observed. By the next year the same psychiatrist confirmed the diagnosis of paranoia, delusions and observation of violent tendencies and said his state had actually deteriorated; he was noted as a poor candidate for outpatient psychotherapy and was recommended for inpatient care at the Bellevue state mental hospital; however the same psychiatrist contrarily said he was seeing a psychiatrist and was improving. The next year he stopped showing up to his appointments, and as the hospital lacked the resources to enforce it, his case was closed.
Politics
By 1956, he often expressed antisemitic attitudes, believing that the United States was controlled by Jews and expressing that Adolf Hitler had been right in his genocide of them. One psychiatrist quoted him as having said: "I go to Church every Sunday morning and fight the Jews." He joined DeWest Hooker's neo-Nazi National Youth League. Patsalos later said Hooker was his idol; to him, he was a father figure, and he adopted many of his antisemitic beliefs. Through Hooker, he met in 1958 George Lincoln Rockwell, with whom he became friends. His NYL membership resulted in several instances of criminal action.As part of the NYL he was arrested for criminal libel, and when he faced possibly being tried as an adult and having his probation revoked, he was given the alternative option of joining the U.S. Marine Corps in 1958. While undergoing basic training at Camp Lejeune, his father died. He was briefly associated with the neo-Nazi National Renaissance Party.
American Nazi Party
While stationed in Quantico, Virginia in 1960, Patsalos rekindled his friendship with Rockwell, and joined his American Nazi Party. Close to the party's headquarters in Arlington, he regularly attended the ANP's rallies. He changed his surname to Patler the same year to make it sound more Anglo-Saxon, or more like Hitler. Rockwell liked Patler's artistic abilities as a cartoonist and graphic designer, which he thought were useful; he was also flattered by Patler's extreme loyalty to him. In summer of that year Patler was honorably discharged from the marines due to his association with the group. He married Erika von Gundlach, a German-American woman, and had two sons with her. He named one of their sons after Nazi martyr Horst Wessel.Within the ANP, Patler was nicknamed "Animal Trainer" for his ability to get even the worst members of the group to do what he wanted; he was known for forming cliques within the movement and secret alliances. According to Rockwell biographer William H. Schmaltz "one was either with him or against him". When Patler joined the ANP, he became close friends with fellow neo-Nazi Dan Burros, who was impressed by his fighting and printing skills. After Patler became jealous that the ANP's National Socialist Bulletin was edited by James K. Warner, they both asked Rockwell to take control of the magazine, which failed but incensed Warner. Both Patler and Burros went to the Anti-Defamation League headquarters on July 26, 1960, where they asked for copies of the ADL Bulletin and placed a swastika sticker in the elevator. A member of the ADL called the police and a warrant was issued for their arrest for defacing the ADL's private property.
After Rockwell was briefly involuntarily committed to a psychiatric hospital, Patler, Burros, and Roger Foss all picketed the White House advocating for him to be freed. Patler and Burros were arrested due to the warrant over the ADL headquarters vandalism when they tried to leave, and were imprisoned. While in jail, Patler threatened to rat the other members out to the ADL and get them put in prison if the group did not pay their bond. Patler's wife ultimately raised bail from a Jewish bondsman. Rockwell was released from the psychiatric hospital after 10 days, and then suspended both Patler and Burros until the outcome of their trial. He then reinstated them due to his conviction in their innocence. Come their trial September 20, they were found guilty and sentenced by a jury to an $100 fine or a 10 day jail sentence, both choosing the fine. Patler appealed but this was rejected. In January 1961, Patler went with Rockwell while they picketed the movie Exodus.
On May 24, 1961, Patler, Rockwell, and eight others were arrested on charges of disturbing the peace in New Orleans after once more trying to picket the movie Exodus. They went on a hunger strike in jail. In June 1961, all ten men were found guilty. Patler was sentenced to 45 days in jail and fined $75. That month, he and Burros travelled together in the ANP's Hate Bus protesting the Freedom Riders.
American National Party and ''Kill!''
Both Burros and Patler caused unity problems in the ANP in 1961, due to what Rockwell biographer William H. Schmaltz described as their "continual scheming". Ralph Grandinetti, Patler, and Burros constantly accused other members of being spies for the Jews; Foss grew to dislike the three as a result. Patler and Burros later got Foss demoted over a disciplinary infraction, leading to him leaving headquarters. Patler became the editor of the National Socialist Bulletin. Following an incident over the Official Stormtrooper's Manual, with Burros and Patler editing it in a manner Rockwell viewed as overly self-promotional, they left the party in November.Burros and Patler moved to New York City, where they launched a magazine called Kill! which was "dedicated to the annihilation of the enemies of the white people". The magazine was an outlet for attacking other members of the movement. Alongside Kill! the two founded their own splinter group, the American National Party. Their party was functionally a duplicate of the ANP, and never had more than a few members. In New York City Patler's marriage degraded and they divorced. Von Gundlach took custody of their children.
In 1962, as part of the American National Party, Patler was arrested and convicted of disorderly conduct for picketing an integration rally in New Jersey. He spent 10 days in jail. Burros and he had a falling out when Burros decided to watch football instead of picketing Eleanor Roosevelt's funeral with him. Patler protested alone, was arrested, and spent 90 days in jail. Their ANP dissolved less than a year after it had been created and the magazine ended after four issues; the whole last issue, written by Patler, proclaimed that Rockwell was right and said the American national Party was dissolved. Burros stayed in New York, while Patler returned to the American Nazi Party in early 1963. Burros later killed himself in 1965 when The New York Times revealed that he was Jewish.
Return to Rockwell's party
Rockwell had secretly been negotiating with other ANP members about Patler's rejoining; Foss, Seth Ryan, and Ralph Forbes all strongly opposed his rejoining. Rockwell initially worried that Patler rejoining would cause members to leave. A meeting was held where Patler admitted that his 1961 charge against Foss was a lie, and Rockwell argued that Patler's benefits to the party outweighed his issues. Rockwell persuaded several newer members to vote to bring him back, which was accepted. In response to the result, Foss screamed at Rockwell, accused the two of being in a homosexual relationship and Rockwell of being treacherous. Both Foss and Forbes immediately resigned despite Rockwell's protests. When he returned to Virginia, Patler served as Rockwell's aide in a variety of positions. Patler met 19-year-old Alice Evrin in 1964, marrying her two years later.Patler began work on their propaganda for the group's magazines, including The Rockwell Report and The Stormtrooper. He edited the latter publication and drew cartoons. In 1964 Patler entered the House of Representatives dressed in blackface and a leopard skin to mock the pro-civil rights Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, yelling "I's de Mississippi delegation!" In 1965, he and Rockwell collaborated on a comic book called The Diary of Ann Fink, designed to mock The Diary of Anne Frank; the illustrations were done by both men. The comic denies the Holocaust, includes photographs of Holocaust victims, and features captions mocking the subjects. He later stopped the printing of this on the grounds the group was "maturing". He, Rockwell, and numerous Klansmen met for a rally in Marquette Park in Chicago in August 1966.
Patler's ethnic Greek heritage and non-Nordic appearance led to criticism of his presence in the party by other neo-Nazis, especially Matt Koehl. Rockwell liked Patler, whose presence he defended by arguing for a more expanded idea of master race. Koehl and the members who agreed with him viewed this change as heretical, leading to a minor schism between the two groups: Koehl's, which adhered to Hitler's original ideas, and Rockwell's "White Unity" faction, which abandoned the specific fixation on Nordic and Germanic identity. The ANP was already small, and wishing to not further the schism Rockwell told Patler to keep himself unobtrusive and not disturb the "Hitler purists", but refused to go back on this change despite Koehl's objections, and told Patler that they would further the "White Unity" movement in the form of "White Power" instead of factionalism; this ultimately prevailed. Patler's presence resulted in several changes to the party in early 1967, including an Americanization of its imagery and a change in name to the National Socialist White People's Party. These changes came as a result of Patler and were objected to by Koehl.