Soon after the end of the Second World War, Leese set up his own "Jewish Information Bureau" and began publishing his own journal,
Gothic Ripples, which was largely concerned with attacking the Jews. He believed that there were 2.5m Jews in Britain at the time, seven times the actual number. The magazine also contained a strongly anti-black racist bent, with a regular column entitled "
Nigger Notes" appearing.
Gothic Ripples was an early proponent of what would come to be known as
Holocaust denial, noting in 1953 that "The fable of the slaughter of six million Jews by Hitler has never been tackled by
Gothic Ripples because we take the view that we would have liked Hitler even better if the figure had been larger; we are so 'obsessed with anti-semitism' that we believe that as long as the destruction was done in a humane manner, it was to the advantage of everyone ... if it had been true. However, it wasn't." In 1946, Leese and six others, Emanuel John William Alford, Leslie Raymond Alford, Alfred McCarthy, Alfred John Robert McCarthy, Frederick Tom Edmunds, and Anthony William Gittens, were arrested for aiding two escaped Dutch prisoners of war who had been members of the
Waffen-SS and were planning to flee to
Argentina through the
ratlines. At his trial, Edmunds openly admitted that he was a fascist. Tony Gittens had joined the Britons in 1924, and served as its secretary from 1950 until his death in 1973. Gittens joined the Imperial Fascist League in the 1930s and, in the late 1960s, he joined the
National Front and worked with its founder,
A. K. Chesterton. Leese and his six accomplices were each found guilty sentenced to one year in prison for their roles in the attempted escape. Leese was released from prison in November 1947. In 1948, Leese formed the National Workers Movement in London. In December 1950 he stood trial for
criminal libel on
Harold Scott,
Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, but was acquitted. In 1951, he published his autobiography
Out of Step: Events in the Two Lives of an Anti-Jewish Camel Doctor. Leese was a mentor to
Colin Jordan and
John Tyndall, the "most significant figures on the extreme right since the 1960s". After his death, his widow, May Winifred Leese (died 1974), helped fund far-right groups. His London house, 74 Princedale Road,
Holland Park, was left to Jordan, and became known as 'Arnold Leese House'. The property became Jordan's base of operations, housing the
White Defence League, the
National Socialist Movement and other far-right operations. Leese died 18 January 1956, aged 77. == Works ==