by Austin Evans Fenner, James Rutenberg and Stephen Mcfarland,
Daily News, 11/13/96
Members of the cultlike group nabbed on weapons charges dubbed
themselves The Supers and were known for secretive and confrontational
behavior, Brooklyn neighbors said yesterday.
Members at times demanded access at all hours of the night to
apartments in three buildings on Carroll St., in Crown Heights,
owned by their organization, the tenants said.
Group members often appeared to search for personal information
about residents of their buildings. Several tenants said that when
they put garbage at the curb, the group would take it back inside,
apparently to search for clues.
They also maintained a 24-hour watch over the block from a second-floor
window at 1107 Carroll St., the building where a police raid Monday
night turned up a huge cache of guns, knives and ammunition.
"I really thought they were a cult, some supremacist thing,"
said Olga Arquer, who had lived in one of the buildings for 20 years.
"There was one older guy who looked like the leader,"
she said. "I would ask his name, and he'd said, 'I'm the supervisor.'
"
Several cult experts yesterday said the group was known as the
Eastern Farm Workers Association and the National Labor Federation.
Tenants and neighbors said a changing cast of about 50 members
lived in the buildings.
Tenants were strictly forbidden to enter the basements or backyards
of the four-story, eight-apartment structures. Group members often
denied access to utility repair and inspection crews, tenants said.
"If they want to fix a leak or something, they bring four
people, and they look at what you have in your apartment. They always
look around to see what you have in your apartment," said one
tenant, speaking on the condition of anonymity.
Organization members were once active in a neighborhood group
called the Crown Heights Progress Council, said Richard Green, director
of the Crown Heights Youth Collective.
Green said he was surprised that the largely white group had made
its base in Crown Heights, a predominantly neighborhood.
Echoing building tenants, Green said he was surprised that the
group had an arsenal of weapons. "You can't plant or cook with
guns," Green said, "so they had them for a reason."
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