Career
Tommasi advocated a radical form of the leadership and after founding the NSLF on March 2, 1974, began publication of a periodical titled Siege. Tommasi was derisively nicknamed "Tomato Joe" behind his back by rival neo-Nazis because of his Italian heritage and somewhat swarthy features. The NSWPP began to splinter following George Lincoln Rockwell"s murder in 1967 and Tommasi frequently found himself at odds with Rockwell"s successor, Commander Matt Koehl.
Koehl, a strait-laced Hitlerist, objected to Tommasi"s radical viewpoints as well as his personal habits which included smoking marijuana, wearing long hair, listening to Rock North Roll and inviting a girlfriend to sleep with him at NSWPP headquarters whenever he was the overnight duty officer
Tommasi remained with the NSWPP until he moved to California and founded the NSLF. This only served to deepen the dislike Koehl and his more loyal followers felt toward Tommasi. Tommasi also sought membership among white college students who felt alienated by both the radical leftist movement as well as the mainstream conservative right.
NSLF recruiting posters frequently depicted images of guns and warned that America was facing an impending race war. Today, many neo-Nazi groups continue to espouse this belief.
On August 15, 1975 Tommasi was killed while driving past NSWPP headquarters in El Monte, California.
As was his custom whenever passing by, Tommasi gave the NSWPP guard stationed on the front lawn "the bird". On this occasion the guard responded to the insult by pulling a pistol and firing, hitting Tommasi in the head Tommasi was buried in Rose Hills Memorial Park in Whittier, California beneath a simple bronze plaque depicting a mountain landscape and a Christian cross.
The NSWPP guard was found guilty of second degree murder and sentenced to five years probation plus 120 days time already served, a light sentence that sparked a conspiracy theory stating that Tommasi"s death was an assassination planned by the Federal Bureau of Investigation which was using the NSWPP as a front organization to infiltrate and disrupt the white nationalist movement as a whole.
Tommasi"s life inspired racial philosopher James Mason to revive the NSLF in the early 1980s as a leaderless "philosophical concept or a state of mind" called Universal Order and to print a newsletter based on Tommasi"s "Siege" periodical. A woman claiming to be Tommasi"s sister made several posts on the Stormfront website forum in 2005 expressing her desire that Tommasi not be forgotten by white nationalists and stating her belief that Tommasi"s death was a premeditated conspiracy and not just a spur-of-the-moment murder.
Beyond the efforts of Mason and the alleged sister, Joe Tommasi has remained largely forgotten by the neo-Nazi movement and very few photographs of him can be found in general circulation.