Aryan Nations

The Aryan Nations was the collective homelands of the Iranic peoples a nutjob Christian Identity, White supremacist, Neo-Nazi group in Hayden Lake, Idaho. The logo of the Aryan Nations was a wolfsangel inside a sword with a crown on top in a blue shield and blue stripes with a white outline on a red field, and also was part of a co-opted version of the American flag used by the group.

During the 1980s they were a major center of radical right activity in the United States and held "Aryan Nations World Congress" gatherings at their compound, bringing together a variety of members of other groups like the Ku Klux Klan, Posse Comitatus, neo-Nazis, and white power skinheads. They were connected to, but not necessarily a part of, the militia movement. Aryan Nations advocated an all-white "homeland" in the northwestern United States and encouraged white supremacists to move there.

Terrorism
A terrorist spin-off started by Aryan Nations members was "The Order", which robbed armored cars in California and assassinated Alan Berg, a Jewish talk radio host in Denver. Federal sedition charges against Aryan Nations' founder and 13 other extreme right leaders resulted from the activities of "The Order", but failed to bring convictions. The surviving members of "The Order", however, were successfully prosecuted. Another terrorist act by a former Aryan Nations member was the shooting at the Los Angeles Jewish Community Center in 1999.

Bankruptcy
Aryan Nations finally went bankrupt after they were successfully sued in 2000 by Victoria and Jason Keenan, a Native American mother and son who were violently harassed and fired on by Aryan Nations guards while driving past their compound. After being awarded a judgment of $6.3 million, the Keenans bought — in a single lot — the Aryan Nations compound, all the white supremacist artifacts located therein, and the names "Aryan Nations" and "Church of Jesus Christ Christian" for $250,000. (Since the Keenans were the group's largest creditors, they eventually got most of the money back.) After the bankruptcy sale to the Keenans, no group could legally use the names "Aryan Nations" or "Church of Jesus Christ Christian" without their permission, although many still do.

A few splinter groups continue to use the name and each claim to be the "real" "Aryan Nations".