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Activists link Virginia Capitol Police sergeant to white nationalism

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Anti-fascist activists in Virginia have published allegations linking a Virginia Capitol Police sergeant to white nationalists. He’s since been placed on paid leave.

Citing a Wednesday release, The Richmond Times-Dispatch reports the Virginia Division of Capitol Police is investigating whether Sgt. Robert A. Stamm violated unspecified policy.

On Tuesday, the Antifascists of Seven Hills published links to Stamm’s social media accounts and described his tattoos. Their blog post said social media activity suggests Stamm follows the Asatru Folk Assembly, which the Southern Poverty Law Center describes as a hate group blending northern European paganism and ethnocentrism.

The anti-fascist group says Stamm caught their attention while monitoring protests calling for Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam’s removal over a racist photo in his 1984 yearbook.

The newspaper couldn’t immediately reach Stamm for comment.

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Information from: Richmond Times-Dispatch, http://www.richmond.com

Prince William schools among thousands of institutions impacted by cyberattack

Prince William County Public Schools is among the thousands of schools and colleges impacted by an outage in Canvas after the parent company of the education app was hit by a cyberattack. Canvas, a platform owned by Instructure, is used by school divisions, colleges and universities for course content, assignments and grades. On its website, Instructure said the outage is related to unauthorized activity in Canvas detected on April 29. On May 7, Instructure identified additional activity tied to the same incident.
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