Andrew Tate Antisemitism Scandal: Nazi Salutes, Denials, and Legal Fallout Explained
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Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan have been at the epicenter of a explosive antisemitism scandal erupting from a wild Miami nightclub bash at Vendome on South Beach. Viral videos captured the Tate duo alongside far-right firebrands like Nick Fuentes, Sneako, Myron Gaines, Clavicular, and Justin Waller, grooving as Ye's banned track "Heil Hitler" blasted through the speakers, with some flashing Nazi salutes and chanting lyrics praising the Nazi leader. The Jerusalem Post reports Andrew flatly denied singing or dancing, insisting on the Patrick Bet-David Podcast Tuesday that he skipped the club vibe, called it bullshit, and just wanted a quick 15-minute dip in and out, later apologizing to anyone offended while blaming immature pals chasing online reactions.
Tristan Tate piled on via X, fingering Sneako for hijacking the phone from Justin Waller to queue the tune during a live stream to 50,000 viewers. Their attorney Joseph McBride told TMZ and CBS News Miami the brothers neither requested nor joined the hate fest, slamming Vendome for scapegoating innocents. The fallout hit hard: Vendome fired three employees Monday after an internal probe, per Times of India and JTA, permanently banned the crew, and vowed zero-tolerance for antisemitism with new safeguards, drawing heat from Miami Beach Mayor Steven Meiner, who decried it as glorifying mass murder, and Jewish groups like the Anti-Defamation League and Auschwitz Jewish Center Foundation blasting the Nazi spectacle as deliberate desecration.
Commissioner Joseph Magazine demands more transparency on ownership ties, as clips showed co-owner Jonathan Mansour nearby. Sneako fired back at the Tates for snitching, while Gaines mocked critics in Orthodox drag. No fresh business moves or social posts from Tate this week, but the brothers' legal shadows loom—Romanian trafficking charges eased in 2025, UK rape probes, and US Homeland Security scrutiny—making this PR nightmare a potential biographical landmine amid their Florida fresh start. Fuentes defended them as uniquely gagged by global heat. The drama underscores Tate's tightrope with controversy magnets, splitting the manosphere and fueling boycotts.
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