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Records show feds used ultra-right radio host for years
They called him "Valhalla."
But it was more than a nickname.
For more than five years, Hal Turner of North Bergen, NJ, lived a double life.
The public knew him as an ultra-right-wing radio talk show host and Internet blogger with an audience of neo-Nazis and white supremacists attracted to his scorched-earth racism and bare-knuckles bashing of public figures. But to the FBI, and its expanding domestic counter-terror intelligence operations in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, Turner was "Valhalla"–his code name as an informant who spied on his own controversial followers.
Turner's clandestine past was confirmed this past summer when he was jailed on charges that he made threats on his blog against three federal judges in Chicago. In court after his arrest, federal prosecutors acknowledged Turner's FBI ties but downplayed his importance and even described him as "unproductive."
But an investigation by The Record–based on government documents, e-mails, court records and almost 20 hours of jailhouse interviews with Turner–shows that federal authorities made frequent use of Turner in its battle against domestic terrorism.