Potok says Stormfront's use of a Martin Luther King domain marks a new trend with hate groups. "Many of these sites appear to be relatively benign," Potok says, "but it is the opposite of what it is."

This new practice of mislabeling sites could mean an attempt by hate groups to sneak past Web filters. Or it could be a way to stealthily go after young people whose parents and teachers try to monitor what they read on the Web.

Another example of the insidious mislabeling on the site is a section called "The Death of the Dream: The Day Martin Luther King Was Shot." This section uses alleged FBI documents purporting to show that the evening after King visited the U.S. Supreme Court to listen in as lawyers argued New York Times vs. Sullivan, he was in hotel room partying with three white women. The site describes "the clinking of glasses and the sounds of illicit sex." It alleges that King cried out "I'm f--ing for God" and "I'm not a Negro tonight!" The site goes on to say that King brutally beat one of the women.

The practice of cyber-squatting -- picking an Internet domain that is the name of another person, group or product -- is also nothing new. Some cybersquatters intend to make a profit by selling the domain to the highest bidder. Other groups, such as Stormfront, pick up names to defame.

This practice has caused civil rights groups in particular to go on the offensive. The NAACP bought the names to nigger.com and various other variations of the word. The Anti-Defamation League has bought the domain name for kike.com and other variations of this and other words offensive to Jews. Unfortunately, the King family let their historic name get away.

"We purchased several names related to Dr. King and the King name, but they [Stormfront] beat us to this one," said Roger Vickers, the public affairs officer for the Martin Luther King Center and the King family in Atlanta.

Vickers said the King family became aware of the site a few months ago and tried to take action, but he admits there is nothing they can do. Since King is a public figure, the copyright laws that sometimes wrestle domain names from cybersquatters don't apply in this case. And it's unlikely that Black would sit down with the King family to negotiate.

Historians point to the need for readers to balance information they receive on the Net -- or anywhere else -- with a healthy level of skepticism. Kerry Taylor, an assistant editor with the Martin Luther King papers project at Stanford University, didn't know about the site. But he wasn't surprised by it. "There is a ton of nonsense on the Web and most people can see the difference between stuff that has veracity and information that attacks," said Taylor.

Taylor called the site's content "propaganda" and debunked many of the site's allegations as complete fabrications. "King was absolutely an ordained a minister," Taylor said. "He was ordained on Feb. 25, 1948." As for King's name, Taylor responded, "Does it matter?" But he called the attack on King's name "interesting." He said, "King was born Michael Luther King." But at the urging of his father, his name was changed to Martin Luther King Jr.

Taylor also addressed the most damaging and long-lasting allegation that has dogged King for years, which was that he was a communist. "He spoke consistently against communism," said Taylor. "He was open to some socialist ideas but as a Christian, he literally thought that communism and Christianity weren't compatible."

Black insists the site sheds light on King's legacy. "Of course all the information on the site is true," said Black.

Yet even if all of the federal documents on the site are authentic, their veracity is suspect, according to Taylor. That's because they are the products of an era in which the U.S. government considered the civil rights movement to be a serious threat to national security.

The FBI once considered King "the most dangerous Negro in America." The agency went on a smear campaign against King and other black leaders and militants in the infamous COINTELPRO operation, which spied on leaders of the civil rights and other political movements in the 1960s and early '70s. Agents tracked King's movements and planted negative stories about him in the press. They even encouraged King to commit suicide in an anonymous note to him.

"What you have to understand is that the FBI material was manufactured," said Taylor. "J. Edgar Hoover was targeting King. So while there is FBI evidence that he was a womanizer, you have to understand where the information is coming from. It has to be weighed very carefully. It was part of a campaign to attack King. It needs to be considered in that light."

While Vickers said the King family's lawyers might look into bringing defamation of character charges against the site, he knows this is a long shot. Even sympathizers to King realize the First Amendment and the freedom associated with the Internet will more than likely prevent such litigation.

"Nothing can be done," said Potok. "Martin Luther King is a public figure who is dead. The chances of this litigation are small at best. You don't have to like MLK or to be honest about him on a Web site."

In a sense, martinlutherking.org does shed light on King's legacy by exposing the tactics of adversaries like J. Edgar Hoover's FBI when he was alive, and Don Black's Stormfront since his death.

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