The Group's tactics consisted of
direct action against those groups it believed were organising violence against minority groups, which sometimes resulted in violent confrontations. On one occasion in July 1962 this led to a riot in London's
Trafalgar Square, when
Colin Jordan tried to address a crowd while standing in front of a large banner which read: "Free Britain from Jewish Control". It also used intelligence, including informers within the fascist groups. The Group frequently disrupted the meetings of Oswald Mosley's Union Movement, and this was a contributing factor to the Union Movement's demise. Commenting on the activities of the 62 Group, the
Board of Deputies of British Jews disapprovingly said that, "some of these anti-fascists are Jews who act as if throwing tomatoes at a British racialist speaker is somehow getting their own back on Hitler." The organisation attempted to expose connections between far-right groups in Britain and former members of the original Nazi Party. Two veterans of the 62 Group stated that they had encountered former members of the
Schutzstaffel (SS) at a meeting held by the neo-Nazi
Northern League in
Brighton. In 1975, the 62 Group dissolved. Some former members of the Group formed the
Community Security Trust. ==
Ridley Road==