Source: Huffington Post
By Ryan Grenoble;
The group claims to have identified 1,000 KKK members and will release their names on Nov. 5.
Last week, a group identifying itself as the online hacktivist collective “Anonymous” vowed to release contact information identifying 1,000 members of the Ku Klux Klan, timed a year after the group first began targeting the KKK in the wake of the Ferguson, Missouri, protests.
On Monday, the group followed through, publishing its first batch of information: an (unverified) list of 57 phone numbers and 23 email addresses allegedly belonging to KKK members. Multiple Twitter commenters questioned the veracity of the information shortly after its release, reporting that many of the numbers belong to businesses with no clear link to the Klan.
Anonymous says it will release a full list of 1,000 names, gleaned from various Twitter accounts it claims to have hacked, on Nov. 5.

Fighting racism is one of the core objectives of the Muslim Times. The burning cross symbolizes that for KKK, their bigotry was entrenched in their Christian understanding, just like terrorism of Al-Qaeeda and ISIS is entrenched in their fallacious understanding of Islam.