Two months ago the existence of a Hitler shrine in rural Wisconsin became public knowledge. Built at the cost of $200,000 by dairy farmer Theo Junker, a former Waffen SS soldier, Junker was unable to obtain the necessary permits for his self-financed shrine to open as a museum.
The Chicago Sun-Times is reporting this morning that a Minneapolis based Nazi group cancelled its plans to hold a meeting at Junker's Hitler-Valhalla.
The Minnesota Nazis were planning to meet at Junker's farm, before heading to Madison for a rally.
Walworth County, Wisconsin's corporation counsel office, which had received the Dairy Aryan's promise that the hall wouldn't be opened to the public, filed a contempt complaint against him, because of "disruptive and possibly violent" behavior that might occur there.
But Junker junked the meeting, and the complaint was dropped.
However, I'm pretty sure we haven't heard the last from this cheesehead.
Previous posts: Wisconsin farmer builds Hitler shrine
Wisconsin Hitler shrine will not open to the public
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