Robert Jay Mathews

Birthday January 16, 1953

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Marfa, Texas, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1984-12-8, Whidbey Island, near Freeland, Washington, U.S. (31 years old)

Nationality United States

#38777 Most Popular

1953

Robert Jay Mathews (January 16, 1953 – December 8, 1984) was an American neo-Nazi activist and the leader of The Order, an American white supremacist militant group.

He was burned alive during a shootout with approximately 75 federal law enforcement agents who surrounded his house on Whidbey Island, near Freeland, Washington.

Robert Mathews was born in Marfa, Texas on January 16, 1953, the youngest of three sons born to Johnny and Una Mathews.

His father, of Scottish descent, was mayor of the town, and the President of the Chamber of Commerce, as well as a businessman and leader for the local Methodist church.

His mother was the town's Cub Scout den mother.

The family moved to Phoenix, Arizona.

Though he was an average student in grade school, history and politics interested him.

At age 11, he joined the John Birch Society, a right-wing advocacy group supporting paleoconservatism, anti-communism and limited government.

1969

Mathews was baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1969.

Mathews formed the Sons of Liberty, an anti-communist militia whose members were mainly Mormon survivalists.

At its peak, it had approximately 30 members.

After filling out his employer's W-4 Form claiming ten dependents, reportedly as an act of tax resistance, he was arrested for tax fraud, tried, and placed on probation for six months.

After a falling out between the Mormon and non-Mormon members of the Sons of Liberty, the organization stagnated and Mathews withdrew from it.

1974

After his probation ended in 1974, he moved to Metaline Falls, Washington, where Mathews and his father purchased 60 wooded acres for their home.

1976

Mathews and Debbie McGarity were married in 1976.

He raised Scottish Galloway cattle.

1978

Mathews was a fan of the far-right extremist 1978 novel The Turner Diaries written by National Alliance founder William Luther Pierce.

1981

He and Debbie McGarity adopted a son in 1981.

Mathews later had a biological daughter with his mistress, Zillah Craig.

1982

Mathews became a white supremacist and in 1982 he made an effort to recruit white families to the Pacific Northwest, or the White American Bastion.

1983

In 1983, Mathews delivered a speech at a National Alliance convention reporting on his efforts to recruit on behalf of the organization, especially among "the yeoman farmers and independent truckers," to his White American Bastion group.

In late September 1983, at a barracks he constructed on his property in Metaline, Mathews and eight other men founded the organization The Order.

They included his friend and neighbor, Ken Loff, and others from the Aryan Nations: Dan Bauer, Randy Duey, Denver Parmenter, Bruce Pierce, and David Lane; and the National Alliance: Richie Kemp and Bill Soderquist.

The group's first task, according to Mathews' plan, was to obtain money to support white separatism.

Their activities began to parallel events in the novel The Turner Diaries.

They robbed an adult bookstore in Spokane, Washington, which netted them $369.10.

They agreed that was too risky, and turned to robbing armored cars and counterfeiting.

They printed some counterfeit $50 bills, and 28-year-old Bruce Pierce was arrested after passing off a few of them.

To raise Pierce's bail, Mathews, acting alone, robbed a bank just north of Seattle, Washington, stealing around $26,000.

Some of The Order's members, along with a new recruit, Gary Yarborough, carried out more robberies and burglaries, which netted them over $43,000.

A subsequent robbery yielded several hundred thousand dollars.

Another recruit, Tom Martinez, was caught and charged for passing more counterfeit currency.

1984

Then in July 1984, they deployed approximately a dozen men in a successful effort to rob a Brink's truck of $3,600,000.

The group distributed some of the stolen money to the North Carolina-based White Patriot Party and other white nationalist organizations.

Prior to his death, Mathews wrote a long letter declaring war on the federal government of the United States and justifying his group's actions.

In it, he describes threats allegedly made to members of his family by Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents, including to his young son while he was away from his house, as well as a number of attempts on his life by other government agents.

He explained the reasons for his decision to "quit being the hunted and become the hunter," and closed by writing, "I am not going into hiding[;] rather I will press the FBI and let them know what it is like to become the hunted. Doing so it is only logical to assume that my days on this planet are rapidly drawing to a close. Even so, I have no fear. For the reality of my life is death, and the worst the enemy can do to me is shorten my tour of duty in this world. I will leave knowing that I have made the ultimate sacrifice to ensure the future of my children."

Mathews and the other members of The Order were eventually betrayed by Martinez, who became an FBI informant after his arrest for counterfeiting.

After he revealed information regarding Mathews' activities to the FBI, agents moved to capture Mathews and his associates, leading to one of the largest manhunts in FBI history.

1999

Mathews was characterized in the 1999 television film Brotherhood of Murder.