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Weird Little Guys

One Man Race War: Joseph Paul Franklin, Pt. 2

Weird Little Guys

iHeartPodcasts and Cool Zone Media

Society & Culture, True Crime

4.61.1K Ratings

🗓️ 5 February 2026

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In 1977, Joseph Paul Franklin started his three year killing spree, but he wasn't the only neo-nazi who murdered for the movement that summer.

Sources:

Sunshine, Spencer. (2024). Neo-Nazi terrorism and countercultural fascism: The Origins and Afterlife of James Mason’s Siege. Taylor & Francis.

Pierce, Kelvin. Sins of My Father, Growing Up with America's Most Dangerous White Supremacist. Independently Published, 2020

Mel Ayton, Dark Soul of the South: The Life and Crimes of Racist Killer Joseph Paul Franklin, Potomac Press, Inc., 2011

Gardell, Mattias. “Lone Wolf Race Warriors and White Genocide.” Cambridge University Press eBooks, 2021, https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108609760.

Bart Schuurman, Lasse Lindekilde, Stefan Malthaner, Francis O'Connor, Paul Gill & Noémie Bouhana (2017): End of the Lone Wolf: The Typology that Should Not Have Been, Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, DOI: 10.1080/1057610X.2017.1419554

Jeffrey Kaplan (2014) Mel Ayton. Dark Soul of the South: The Life and Crimes of Racist Killer Joseph Paul Franklin , Terrorism and Political Violence, 26:5, 855-857

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.5

Guaranteed Human.

0:04.9

1969, Malcolm and Martin are gone.

0:07.8

America is in crisis.

0:09.5

At a Morehouse college, the students make their move.

0:12.3

These students, including a young Samuel L. Jackson,

0:15.4

locked up the members of the board of trustees, including Martin Luther King's senior.

0:20.6

It's the true story of protests and rebellion in black American history that you'll never

0:24.9

forget.

0:25.9

I'm Hans Charles.

0:26.9

I'm Mena Lake Lemoombo.

0:28.1

Listen to the A building on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your

0:33.5

podcasts.

0:34.7

When segregation was a law, one mysterious black club owner, Charlie Fitzgerald, had his own

0:40.2

rules.

0:41.2

Segregation and the day integration at night.

0:44.3

It was like stepping on another world.

0:46.7

Was he a businessman?

0:48.1

A criminal.

0:49.6

A hero.

0:50.8

Charlie was an example of power.

0:53.8

They had to crush him.

...

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