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Augustus Sol Invictus

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Augustus Sol Invictus (born Austin Mitchell Gillespie; July 31, 1984)[1] is an American far-right political activist, attorney, blogger, and white nationalist.[2]

Key Information

Invictus was a candidate for the Libertarian Party nomination in the 2016 United States Senate election in Florida. Local party chairman Adrian Wyllie resigned over his candidacy and the unwillingness of the party to disavow it.[3][4] He lost overwhelmingly in the primary to opponent Paul Stanton, garnering 26.5% of votes cast.[5]

In a press release from 2015, Invictus was accused by the Libertarian Party of Florida of advocating for eugenics and "state-sponsored murder".[6] In April 2017, the Libertarian Party of Florida, following mediation, issued a retraction of the 2015 press release, stating that "it exceeded the mandate of the executive committee", and declaring that "Mr. Invictus has always been a member in good standing, is a past chair of the Libertarian Party of Orange County, a sponsor of the 2016 and 2017 LPF State Conventions, as well as a dedicated volunteer on the Legislative Review Committee."[7] In July 2017, Invictus changed his party affiliation to Republican, announcing his candidacy for the 2018 United States Senate election in Florida.[8][9]

Invictus was a headline speaker at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, on August 12, 2017, that ended with three deaths, and was ultimately tried and convicted for his actions that weekend.[10][2] He has represented Marcus Faella, the former head of the white-supremacist group American Front, in court. Invictus is the publisher of The Revolutionary Conservative, a publication which calls for a violent uprising[11] and states that its aim is to restore the American republic and defend Western civilization.[12] He was controversial within the Libertarian Party for his neo-fascist political views and history of racist associations.[13] He has been described by media reports as being associated with the alt-right movement.[14] He has proposed the repeal of several amendments to the US Constitution, stipulating that only white male citizens should be allowed to vote or own real property.[15][16]

Career

[edit]

Invictus graduated from the University of South Florida with a BA with honors in philosophy. Following his graduation, he attended DePaul University College of Law and graduated in 2011. While in law school, Invictus earned a fellowship at the International Human Rights Law Institute.[citation needed]

He was managing partner of Imperium, P.A., a law firm he founded in 2013, until his retirement from the practice of law in 2017. Invictus is currently the publisher of The Revolutionary Conservative, a far-right publication with the stated aim of "restoring the American republic and defending Western Civilization".[17]

Invictus was a headlined speaker at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, on August 12, 2017, where a white supremacist drove his vehicle into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing Heather Heyer.[18] The Miami Herald wrote of Invictus's involvement in the fatal event that "the political fallout over Charlottesville may end whatever hopes for public office [Invictus] had."[10]

2016 U.S. Senate campaign

[edit]

On May 19, 2015, Invictus announced his campaign for the U.S Senate as a candidate for the Libertarian Party in the 2016 Florida election.[19]

In response to Invictus's campaign, Adrian Wyllie resigned from his position as chairman of the Libertarian Party of Florida, calling Invictus a "violent Fascist and Neo-Nazi" whose ideology was incompatible with libertarianism and saying he did not want to be part of the same party. The chairman also accused Invictus of supporting eugenics and of "sadistically dismembering a goat in a ritualistic sacrifice".[20][21] Invictus responded by admitting that he once wrote a paper advocating eugenics but saying that he has since changed his mind.[22][23][24] He said he had sacrificed the goat and drunk its blood as part of a ritual to give thanks for surviving a pilgrimage in spring 2013, but denied it was "sadistic".[25][26][27] In 2024, he claimed he had begun drinking human blood as he had converted to Catholicism, in reference to the Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation.[28][better source needed]

He has also said that he is not a white supremacist, citing the fact that his children are part Hispanic; he acknowledged that some white supremacists support his campaign, while claiming he does not associate with them.[26]

In May 2016, Invictus began the "Possibility of Revolution" tour in Florida, speaking in Orlando, Jacksonville, Tallahassee, Tampa, Fort Myers, and Miami in one continuous circuit.[29] At the end of this tour, Paul Stanton entered the Senate race, creating the first Libertarian primary for the United States Senate in Florida history.[30] Invictus lost the primary election on August 30, 2016, with Stanton receiving 73.5% of the vote.[31]

Views

[edit]

During his campaign, a letter written by Invictus in 2013[32] came to light in which he renounced his citizenship and claimed to have plans of venturing out in the woods only to return bringing war:

I have prophesied for years that I was born for a Great War; that if I did not witness the coming of the Second American Civil War I would begin it myself. Mark well: That day is fast coming upon you. On the New Moon of May, I shall disappear into the Wilderness. I will return bearing Revolution, or I will not return at all.[32]

Invictus has been accused of supporting state-sponsored eugenics for a paper he wrote as a law student.[33] Invictus, however, wrote a disclaimer to the paper stating that although he believes the strong and intelligent should breed and the weak and stupid should not, he does not believe that the government can be trusted to implement such a program.[34][15]

Invictus has been identified as a Holocaust denier. He has said: "Do I believe that 6 million Jews were killed by evil Hitler? Is that what you're asking me? ... Okay, then I am still waiting to see those facts."[35][36]

Invictus has proposed repealing the Fourteenth, Fifteenth, and Nineteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States,[16] insisting that only white male citizens should have the right to vote or own real property.

Invictus believes that the United States should embrace a non-interventionist approach to foreign policy, arguing that an interventionist approach has resulted in the loss of American lives and the accumulation of trillions of dollars in debt. He opposes using the U.S. military to protect US national interests or prevent meddling in US affairs.[37]

Invictus advocates for balancing the budget, shrinking the size of government, ceasing "reckless" government spending and deregulating American business. He is also in favor of repealing the personal income tax, abolishing the IRS and recreating the tax code.[37] According to Invictus, he does not support mass immigration and is against open borders for the United States.[38] However, he supports policies that would streamline the process of immigration and naturalization so that immigrants who wish to integrate and work in the United States can do so with ease.[37]

Invictus is opposed to the war on drugs and has labeled it a failure. He supports repealing the Controlled Substances Act and abolishing the DEA. He believes that the United States should find alternative forms of energy so as to reduce U.S dependence on foreign energy. He does not believe there should be a trade-off between economic freedom and the destruction of the environment.[37]

Personal life

[edit]

He was accepted into and graduated from DePaul University in Chicago with a Juris Doctorate and by 2006 he was married, and a father of four multi-ethnic children.[1][39] Invictus was born Austin Gillespie, and in 2006 he legally changed his name to Augustus Sol Invictus.[33] Until 2022 he was a Thelemite, though was expelled from the Thelemic fraternal organization, Ordo Templi Orientis; he has also identified as a pagan.[26][33]

As of 2022, he has reverted to the Catholic Faith and identifies as a traditionalist.[40]

[edit]

Invictus has been accused of crimes including domestic violence, stalking, and threats of bodily harm verbally and with a firearm, which have been reported to law enforcement in Florida at least ten times.[41] The first such allegation which gained public attention was reported in 2017 by his ex-fiancée. The Huffington Post reported that in July 2017, police in Orlando, Florida, "recommended that charges of domestic battery by strangulation and aggravated battery be filed against Invictus."[42] According to the article, charges were never filed due to both a lack of evidence and a lack of cooperation from the alleged victim. The victim stated to police that she hesitated as a result of feeling intimidated by Invictus's connections to white-supremacist organizations and legal expertise in addition to her allegations of serial acts of violence.[42]

Invictus was arrested in Melbourne, Florida, on January 1, 2020, on charges of "kidnapping, 'high and aggravated' domestic violence and possession of a firearm during a crime of violence".[43] Upon his arrest in Melbourne, Invictus was then extradited to Rock Hill, South Carolina, where the alleged crimes, this time against another woman, who is his estranged wife, occurred. He requested a bail hearing which occurred on February 14, 2020, and his accuser made a statement to the court recounting her allegations. Her claims match as a pattern, the description of the acts Invictus's prior accuser had alleged he perpetrated. For example, his wife alleged he had abused her for 6 years via assaults including punching her in the stomach to avoid visible bruises, and locking her in the bedroom for days. Also as in prior allegations by the other victim, Invictus's wife independently reported to law enforcement that he had repeatedly strangled her, threatened her life with a firearm, and used the threat to use his extremist followers to silence her, claiming he would send them to target her and end her life if she escaped.[44] On February 14, 2020, Judge Hall in Rock Hill, South Carolina, ordered that Invictus be held in jail without bond.[11][45] On February 19, 2020, kidnapping charges were dismissed after the judge asserted that the charge lacked probable cause; however, the charges of "high and aggravated" domestic violence and possession of a firearm in commission of a crime of violence remain.[46]

On March 31, 2020,[47] the court determined that Invictus could be freed on bail after his public defender cited the risk posed to inmates by the coronavirus pandemic.

However, less than three weeks after Invictus's release he was re-arrested in violation of the terms of his bond. Despite her restraining order, Invictus's wife reported that he made threatening and harassing contact with her over twenty times. He allegedly made an implied threat of violence at which point she agreed to meet him in a park with their children. At that time, Invictus allegedly spoke to their child referring to his accuser with derogatory slurs. On July 23, 2020, Invictus was denied a fourth request for bail by a judge in Rock Hill, South Carolina.[48]

Stalking charges in Florida were dropped on August 4, 2020, after prosecutors determined the case was "not suitable for prosecution".[49][better source needed] On August 25, 2020, Invictus was granted release bail in York County, South Carolina.[50]

On April 19, 2022, Invictus was found not guilty of all charges after the jury deliberated for 30 minutes. The alleged victim, Invictus's wife, did not attend the trial to testify. After his acquittal, Invictus publicly requested letters of apology from authorities responsible for his arrest and prosecution.[51]

In 2023, Invictus was arrested and charged with crimes related to the 2017 Unite the Right Rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.[52] The trial began in February, 2024, with Invictus' attorney attempting to have the prosecutor's office recuse itself. Although Invictus is a lawyer, he has chosen not to represent himself in court.[53] In October 2024, a jury found him guilty of burning an object with the intent to intimidate, which is a felony in Virginia.[2] In January 2025, Invictus was sentenced to nine-and-a-half months in jail for his conviction, with the sentence delayed for 60 days pending appeal.[54] He was subsequently suspended from the practice of law in Florida.[55]

Electoral history

[edit]
2016 United States Florida Senate Libertarian primary results[56]
Party Candidate Votes %
Libertarian Paul Stanton 2,946 73.5
Libertarian Augustus Invictus 1,063 26.5
Total votes 4,009 100

See also

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Augustus Sol Invictus (born Austin Gillespie; July 31, 1983) is an American attorney and political activist who legally changed his name in 2006 to reflect classical Roman influences.[1] Educated at the University of South Florida and DePaul University College of Law, he was admitted to the Florida Bar in 2012 and founded The Invictus Law Firm in Orlando, specializing in criminal defense for cases involving trafficking, terrorism, and violent crimes.[2][3] Invictus pursued political office, campaigning for the U.S. Senate in Florida as a Libertarian nominee in 2016 before withdrawing amid internal party disputes, and later as a Republican write-in for President in 2024.[4] His activism includes advocacy for civil liberties and participation in right-wing rallies, such as speaking at the 2017 Unite the Right event in Charlottesville, Virginia, for which he was convicted in 2025 of bias-motivated intimidation related to a preceding torch-lit march at the University of Virginia, receiving a sentence of 9.5 months in jail and two years probation.[5] In his legal practice, he has represented defendants in politically sensitive matters, including members of the Proud Boys in a lawsuit against the federal government over January 6 events.[6] Invictus has authored works like Set the World on Fire detailing his experiences in radical politics.[7]

Early Life and Background

Childhood and Family

Augustus Sol Invictus was born Austin Mitchell Gillespie on July 31, 1983, in Dayton, Ohio.[8] His family relocated to Florida during his youth, where he attended high school in Orlando.[8] Little public information exists regarding his parents' occupations or specific family dynamics in childhood, though his father is identified as John Gillespie.[9] This early move to Florida exposed him to the state's diverse urban environment, though no verified accounts detail particular cultural or religious influences shaping his formative years.[8]

Education and Early Influences

Invictus completed a Bachelor of Arts degree with honors in philosophy at the University of South Florida.[10][11] This program exposed him to foundational concepts in ethics, metaphysics, and political theory, fostering critical examination of authority and individual rights that aligned with emerging anti-statist inclinations.[12] Following undergraduate studies, he attended DePaul University College of Law, earning a Juris Doctor in international and comparative law in 2011.[2][10] His legal training emphasized cross-jurisdictional analysis of governance structures, reinforcing skepticism toward centralized power through comparative evaluation of legal systems.[13] Early intellectual formation during his philosophy coursework drew from classical liberal traditions, with Invictus later referencing Ayn Rand's works as central to libertarian ideology, albeit critiquing their elevation to dogmatic "holy texts" within party factions.[14] This engagement highlighted empirical critiques of collectivism and advocacy for rational self-interest, predating more esoteric personal developments.[15]

Personal Transformation

Name Change

Augustus Sol Invictus, born Austin Gillespie, legally changed his name to Augustus Sol Invictus, a Latin phrase translating to "majestic unconquered sun." This alteration symbolized an assertion of personal sovereignty, drawing directly from Roman imperial and solar deity traditions, where "Sol Invictus" referred to the "Unconquered Sun" cult promoted by Emperor Aurelian in the late 3rd century CE as a emblem of imperial invincibility and divine endurance.[16] Invictus has described the choice as adopting his religious name to unify his everyday existence with his spiritual commitments, eliminating any separation between profane and sacred aspects of his life. The name change process was formalized through legal petition, reflecting a deliberate embrace of classical antiquity's heroic archetypes over conventional nomenclature. Invictus cited the ordinariness of his birth name as incompatible with his evolving self-conception, positioning the new identity as a foundational act of self-determination amid broader personal reinvention. Primary documentation of his rationale appears in public interviews, where he emphasized the integration of identity as a core principle, though specific court records detailing the petition's approval remain publicly sparse. Immediate responses from associates varied, with some viewing the adoption as an eccentric but authentic expression of individualism, while others questioned its practicality in professional contexts; however, Invictus maintained it as essential to his philosophical coherence. This step preceded heightened public scrutiny during his political endeavors, underscoring the name's role in projecting an unyielding, archetypal persona rooted in historical symbolism rather than modern egalitarianism.[17]

Philosophical and Spiritual Awakening

In 2013, Augustus Sol Invictus embarked on a solitary pedestrian journey from central Florida to the Mojave Desert in California, eschewing money, provisions, or modern transportation to test his capacity for self-reliance and severance from material dependencies.[18] [19] This odyssey, spanning thousands of miles across varied terrains, exposed him to acute physical privations including starvation, exposure to elements, and reliance on sporadic aid from encountered individuals.[18] Upon reaching the desert, Invictus undertook a week-long fast interspersed with periods of introspection and supplication, during which he confronted existential limits and reported attaining clarifying visions amid near-delirium from dehydration and exhaustion.[18] [20] These ordeals crystallized a philosophical pivot toward valuing innate resilience over societal crutches, interpreting the survival ordeal as empirical validation of human potential unbound by institutional norms. The expedition precipitated Invictus's adoption of Thelema, an esoteric system derived from Aleister Crowley's writings emphasizing individual will and self-deification, which he pursued through affiliation with the Ordo Templi Orientis before his expulsion in 2013.[21] This marked a deliberate divergence from Abrahamic traditions toward syncretic paganism centered on solar archetypes like Sol Invictus, framed by Invictus as a pragmatic synthesis derived from direct experiential inquiry rather than inherited doctrines.[21] Subsequent reflections, including in his 2016 publication of LSD-influenced journals, underscored the journey's role in fostering a worldview prioritizing unmediated confrontation with reality's causal mechanisms.[22]

Professional Career

Invictus attended DePaul University College of Law in Chicago, Illinois, where he earned a Juris Doctor degree in International and Comparative Law in 2011.[2][23] Following graduation, he passed the Florida Bar Examination and was admitted to the Florida Bar on September 24, 2012, receiving bar number 98586.[2] He was also admitted to practice in Illinois, Massachusetts, and New York.[24] In 2019, he gained admission to the United States Supreme Court Bar.[25]

Law Practice and Advocacy Work

Invictus founded The Invictus Law Firm, P.A., in Orlando, Florida, where he established a practice centered on criminal defense, drawing from his background as the son of a criminal defense attorney.[3] Admitted to the Florida Bar following his graduation from DePaul University College of Law in 2011, his firm operates from 424 E Central Blvd #731, emphasizing representation in cases involving alleged malicious prosecutions, isolation in custody, and challenges to prosecutorial conduct.[2] [23] The practice has prioritized defending clients against what Invictus describes as overzealous government actions, including instances of denied due process.[3] In his professional work, Invictus has undertaken representations aimed at vindicating individual rights against state authority. For example, in 2021, he initiated litigation in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida against the Ninth Judicial Circuit, seeking redress for claimed violations stemming from judicial proceedings.[26] More recently, as of June 2025, Invictus serves as counsel for five men convicted on charges related to the January 6, 2021, events at the U.S. Capitol, filing a $100 million civil suit against the federal government alleging unconstitutional deprivations of liberty and due process in their prosecutions and incarcerations.[6] This case underscores his advocacy for clients asserting defenses rooted in constitutional protections, positioning the firm as a vehicle for contesting perceived federal overreach.[6] Invictus's legal efforts have extended to broader liberty-oriented causes, though specific pro bono engagements remain limited in public documentation. His firm's website highlights a commitment to clients facing "crimes I did not commit" parallels, reflecting a pattern of skepticism toward institutional narratives in criminal matters.[3] While not extensively documented in peer-reviewed or primary legal scholarship, these representations align with a defense posture that critiques systemic biases in prosecution, prioritizing empirical challenges to evidence and procedural fairness over deference to official accounts.[25]

Political Engagement

Initial Political Involvement

In 2013, Augustus Sol Invictus, then known by his birth name Austin Mitchell Gillespie, articulated radical anti-establishment views in a public departure memo from his position at a Florida law firm, framing his exit as preparation for revolutionary upheaval.[27] He declared that he had "prophesied for years" his role in a "Great War," specifically invoking the prospect of a Second American Civil War, which he claimed he would initiate if not otherwise witnessed.[15] This document critiqued modern American democracy as "filth" and its culture as decadent, positioning lawyers as parasites sustaining an unjust order through flawed laws.[27] Invictus's memo included a formal renunciation of U.S. citizenship, alongside his law licenses and material possessions, signaling a voluntary withdrawal from state authority and advocacy for contemptuous rejection of the federal system.[27] He announced plans to retreat into the wilderness on the new moon of May 2013, intending to return either with revolutionary momentum or not at all, thereby endorsing principles akin to extreme voluntaryism through personal secession from societal norms.[27] These statements predated his affiliation with organized libertarian groups and represented an individualistic, first-principles challenge to centralized governance, emphasizing causal breakdown of the republic via internal conflict rather than reform.[28] Such expressions aligned with broader critiques in anarcho-libertarian thought, prioritizing individual sovereignty over statist institutions, though Invictus's emphasis on violence distinguished it from non-aggression doctrines prevalent in mainstream libertarian activism.[27] No records indicate formal involvement in Libertarian Party organizing or Mises Institute-style events during this period; his early engagement remained centered on personal manifestos disseminated online, influencing his later political identity without structured grassroots efforts.[28]

2016 U.S. Senate Campaign

Augustus Sol Invictus declared his candidacy for the Libertarian Party's nomination in Florida's 2016 U.S. Senate election in 2015, positioning himself as a challenger to the bipartisan establishment in a race for incumbent Republican Marco Rubio's seat.[4] His platform emphasized strict non-interventionism in foreign policy, the abolition of the Federal Reserve System, and comprehensive criminal justice reforms including ending the war on drugs and reducing mandatory minimum sentences.[29] Invictus framed his bid as a radical departure from conventional politics, advocating for immediate U.S. withdrawal from overseas conflicts and a return to constitutional limits on federal power. The campaign faced internal Libertarian Party tensions, with Invictus competing against Paul Stanton, a more conventional candidate backed by party regulars wary of Invictus's provocative persona.[30] Invictus lacked formal endorsements from state party leadership, which viewed his unorthodox background—including public admissions of ritualistic practices—as a liability that could alienate voters and harm the party's broader image.[31] Media outlets covered the race with a focus on Invictus's eccentric style and past statements rather than policy details, often portraying him as a fringe figure despite his substantive libertarian arguments on fiscal restraint and civil liberties.[32][33] No joint debates with major-party candidates materialized, limiting direct voter exposure beyond primary-focused events and online engagements like Reddit AMAs.[34] In the August 30, 2016, Libertarian primary, Invictus secured 26% of the vote against Stanton's 74%, demonstrating notable support among a subset of party voters drawn to his anti-establishment fervor amid low overall turnout typical for minor-party primaries.[31] The defeat reflected party dynamics favoring electability over ideological purity, as Stanton advanced to the general election where he received 2.92% statewide against Rubio's victory.[35] Invictus's primary performance underscored a divide within Florida Libertarians between those receptive to his bold critiques of government overreach and others prioritizing mainstream appeal to protest-vote seekers.[31]

Post-2016 Activities and Campaigns

Following his unsuccessful 2016 U.S. Senate campaign, Augustus Sol Invictus maintained political involvement by announcing a Republican write-in candidacy for President of the United States in the 2020 election cycle.[4] His platform emphasized radical constitutional reforms, including proposals to repeal the 14th, 15th, and 19th Amendments.[36] Invictus received no support at the Republican National Convention, where he was defeated on August 24, 2020.[4] In early 2017, Invictus critiqued the Libertarian Party's national leadership, accusing chairman Nicholas Sarwark of aligning with communist elements and vowing to contest the party's ideological trajectory.[37] This reflected his advocacy for a stricter adherence to traditional libertarian principles amid shifting party dynamics.[38] Despite marginalization from mainstream libertarian circles due to prior controversies, Invictus continued promoting anti-globalist and states' rights positions through public statements and affiliations with fringe conservative networks into the early 2020s.[37]

Electoral Record

In the Libertarian Party primary for the U.S. Senate seat in Florida on August 30, 2016, Augustus Sol Invictus competed against Paul Stanton. Invictus received 1,063 votes, accounting for 26.5% of the total, while Stanton secured 2,946 votes (73.5%), with 4,009 votes cast overall. This outcome reflected minimal voter participation in the party's primary, as Libertarian primaries statewide drew far fewer ballots than major-party contests, limiting the scale of support assessment.
ElectionDatePartyVotesPercentageOpponent(s)Outcome
U.S. Senate (Florida) PrimaryAugust 30, 2016Libertarian1,06326.5%Paul Stanton (2,946 votes, 73.5%)Lost nomination
No other federal, state, or local elections featuring Invictus yielded verifiable vote tallies in official records beyond this primary.

Ideology and Public Statements

Libertarian and Anarcho-Capitalist Principles

Invictus identifies as a hard-line libertarian, emphasizing adherence to the non-aggression principle (NAP), which holds that individuals and entities may not initiate force, fraud, or coercion against others' persons or property.[39][21] This principle underpins his rejection of state interventions that violate voluntary exchange and self-ownership, positioning government actions as inherently aggressive unless justified by explicit consent, which he argues is absent in modern welfare states and taxation systems.[40] Central to his economic views is the advocacy for abolishing the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and repealing the federal income tax, which he contends extracts wealth coercively and obscures fiscal accountability from citizens.[4] He proposes recreating the tax code to ensure transparency, enabling individuals to comprehend and consent to any remaining obligations, while viewing income taxation as a root cause of fiscal dependency and enabling expansive government that funds unsustainable entitlements and conflicts.[4] Similarly, Invictus opposes welfare programs, criticizing them for subsidizing the "weakest, least intelligent, and most diseased" at the expense of productive citizens, thereby perpetuating cycles of dependency rather than promoting self-reliance through market incentives.[28] In line with anarcho-capitalist alternatives to state monopolies, Invictus's 2016 Senate campaign accepted Bitcoin donations, signaling endorsement of decentralized cryptocurrencies as a means to bypass central banking controls and enable voluntary, borderless transactions free from fiat currency manipulation.[28] His broader platform calls for shrinking government by repealing superfluous laws and eliminating redundant agencies, advocating a minimal state that defers to private contracts and market-driven dispute resolution over coercive public enforcement.[41] This reflects a preference for cultural conservatism within libertarianism, critiquing progressive open-borders variants in the Libertarian Party as deviations from principled defense of property rights and community standards against unchecked immigration that could undermine voluntary associations.[38]

Views on Foreign Policy and Civil Liberties

Invictus advocates a non-interventionist foreign policy, emphasizing reduced U.S. military involvement abroad to avoid entangling alliances and the blowback from empire-building. During his 2016 U.S. Senate campaign, he pledged to "implement a non-interventionist foreign policy," critiquing over a century of American interventions as having fostered dependency and conflict rather than stability.[41][4] He has described existing U.S. foreign policies as inherently interventionist, arguing they prioritize global hegemony over national interests and constitutional limits on executive power.[42] Invictus opposes unconditional foreign aid, including to Israel, viewing it as enabling perpetual entanglement without reciprocal benefits or alignment with American sovereignty.[42] Regarding civil liberties, Invictus upholds absolutist interpretations of the First and Second Amendments, rejecting restrictions framed as safety measures or social harmony. He supports the full restoration of Second Amendment rights, opposing federal prohibitions on firearms ownership by law-abiding citizens and decrying gun control as an overreach often justified by selective historical narratives.[42] On free speech, he dismisses political correctness as a tool for suppressing dissent, stating it represents "the refuge of Nietzsche's last man" and advocating unrestricted expression even for controversial views.[41] Invictus extends this to personal autonomy, asserting that government has no role in regulating consensual relationships, such as marriage based on sexual orientation.[42] These positions stem from his broader libertarian framework, prioritizing individual rights against state encroachments that erode foundational protections.[41]

Critiques of Government and Media

Invictus has accused mainstream media outlets of prioritizing sensational coverage of his eccentric persona and ritualistic elements over substantive discussions of his policy proposals during his political campaigns. For instance, during his 2016 U.S. Senate bid, reports emphasized his admitted goat sacrifice and self-imposed march across the American Southwest, framing these as bizarre or extreme, while largely sidelining his advocacy for libertarian reforms such as ending federal overreach in domestic affairs.[43][38] He has further critiqued media institutions for systemic biases and double standards in reporting, particularly in their handling of narratives involving race, politics, and historical events. In a 2025 statement on X, Invictus highlighted perceived inconsistencies in coverage of violence, asserting that media would label similar acts by white individuals as "supremacist terrorism" while downplaying equivalent actions by minorities.[44] Similarly, he described mainstream media as a "cartel" that propagated favorable portrayals of figures like Nelson Mandela while now overlooking alleged atrocities under the ANC regime in South Africa, demanding uncritical allegiance from audiences.[45] Invictus advocates decentralizing political and economic power to mitigate elite capture and institutional corruption, drawing parallels to historical precedents where centralized authority eroded republican virtues. Rooted in his anarcho-capitalist framework, this stance posits that concentrated federal power invites abuse, as evidenced by his "Declaration of the Failings of the Federal Government," which enumerates systemic inefficiencies and overreaches in Washington.[46] He has invoked Roman imperial decline—mirroring his adopted nomenclature of "Augustus Invictus," a title denoting unconquered sovereignty—as an analogy for modern America's risks, where expansive bureaucracy supplants individual liberty and fosters dependency on distant elites.[47] In recent years, Invictus has intensified critiques of government weaponization of legal processes, terming it "lawfare" to target political dissidents from a right-libertarian perspective. On X in 2024, he announced representation through the Free Expression Foundation for activist Nate Damigo against a bankruptcy court judgment viewed as punitive retribution, framing such tactics as erosions of due process.[48] This aligns with broader condemnations of federal overreach, including police and prosecutorial excesses, which he argues undermine civil liberties under the guise of enforcement, echoing calls for structural reforms to restore localized accountability over monolithic state control.[49]

Controversies and Criticisms

Ritual Practices and Public Backlash

In 2013, Augustus Sol Invictus undertook a solo journey on foot from central Florida to the Mojave Desert, where he fasted and engaged in prayer for approximately one week as part of a personal spiritual quest.[50][18] Upon his return, he conducted a private pagan ritual of renewal, during which he sacrificed a goat by killing it and consumed some of its blood, describing the act as a non-sadistic expression of thanksgiving and spiritual purification rather than violence for its own sake.[51][52] Invictus later confirmed these details in public statements, emphasizing the ritual's solitary nature and its roots in ancient pagan traditions, though experts on modern paganism have noted that animal sacrifice remains a rare practice among contemporary adherents, typically confined to a small minority.[53][54] The ritual gained widespread attention during Invictus's 2015 campaign for the U.S. Senate as a Libertarian in Florida, after details emerged through his own disclosures and opponent scrutiny, sparking a media frenzy that highlighted the act's graphic elements.[55][28] This revelation prompted significant backlash within the Libertarian Party of Florida, including the resignation of state party chairman Adrian Wyllie on October 1, 2015, who cited the goat sacrifice—along with Invictus's advocacy for eugenics and calls for civil war—as incompatible with the party's values and electability.[55][18] Party affiliates and commentators expressed concerns over animal cruelty and Invictus's mental stability, with some questioning whether the ritual indicated broader unfitness for public office.[51][20] Invictus defended the practice as a protected form of religious expression under the First Amendment, arguing it was a personal, non-public act unrelated to his political platform and akin to historical or cultural rituals in various traditions.[51][52] He maintained that critics' outrage reflected intolerance for individual liberty in spiritual matters, positioning the incident as an example of overreach against unconventional beliefs rather than evidence of wrongdoing.[54][28] Opponents, including animal rights advocates and political rivals, countered that the deliberate killing and consumption of blood evoked sadism and barbarism, fueling demands for his disqualification from the primary and amplifying perceptions of eccentricity that undermined libertarian principles of rational governance.[50][55] Despite the controversy, Invictus proceeded in the race but lost the Libertarian nomination on August 29, 2016, to Paul Stanton Jr., amid ongoing party divisions.[56]

Involvement in Right-Wing Events

Invictus participated as a speaker and co-organizer in the Unite the Right rally on August 12, 2017, in Charlottesville, Virginia, an event convened to oppose the removal of a statue honoring Confederate General Robert E. Lee and to assert rights to public assembly.[57][5] He positioned his attendance as support for preserving historical monuments and exercising First Amendment protections against perceived cultural erasure.[58] The rally drew alliances with alt-right personalities, including figures from groups like the Proud Boys' Fraternal Order of Alt-Knights, where Invictus held a leadership role; critics from outlets such as the Southern Poverty Law Center labeled these associations as endorsements of white nationalist agendas, while Invictus maintained they served tactical purposes in defending civil liberties.[59][60] In the rally's aftermath, amid reports of physical confrontations between demonstrators and opponents, Invictus disavowed responsibility for the violence, attributing it to interference by antifa activists who he claimed instigated clashes.[61] He reiterated commitments to non-violent expression, framing subsequent public backlash as assaults on free speech rights rather than legitimate responses to the event's content.[62] In January 2020, Augustus Sol Invictus was arrested in Florida on a South Carolina warrant for charges including kidnapping, domestic violence of a high and aggravated nature, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a violent crime, stemming from allegations that he had taken his wife and children at gunpoint.[63][64] He spent several months in custody, including periods in both Florida and South Carolina jails, before being released on bond in August 2020.[65] In April 2022, a South Carolina jury acquitted him of the domestic violence charge after deliberating for less than 30 minutes; the kidnapping and firearm charges do not appear to have proceeded to conviction based on available court outcomes.[65] Invictus faced separate allegations in April 2020 of stalking his estranged wife through communications involving their children, leading to his brief booking in Orange County, Florida, jail shortly after his release from prior custody.[66] No conviction resulted from this incident, and public records do not indicate further prosecution or resolution details beyond the initial charge. In connection with his participation in a 2017 torchlit procession on the University of Virginia campus ahead of the Unite the Right rally, Invictus was charged in Virginia with burning an object with the intent to intimidate, under a 2002 state statute previously unapplied to such conduct.[62] On October 11, 2024, an Albemarle County jury convicted him following a trial where his defense argued the charge infringed on free speech protections, marking the first conviction under this law for carrying a lit torch in a protest context.[62] On January 10, 2025, he was sentenced to five years in prison, with all but 9.5 months suspended, plus two years of supervised probation; execution of the sentence was stayed for 60 days pending appeal.[67][5] Invictus has maintained that the prosecution constitutes political targeting of his activism, citing the novel application of the statute and comparisons to unprosecuted similar events.[68] The conviction prompted a notice of judgment of guilt to the Florida Bar in October 2025, potentially leading to disbarment proceedings.[69]

Personal Life

Religious and Philosophical Beliefs

Augustus Sol Invictus legally changed his name in 2006 to evoke the Roman deity Sol Invictus, the "Unconquered Sun," a cult promoted in the late Roman Empire as a syncretic solar worship blending Hellenistic, Eastern, and indigenous Roman elements, symbolizing imperial invincibility and cosmic order.[70] This choice reflected his early affinity for pre-Christian Roman paganism, which he integrated with modern occult traditions as a framework for personal sovereignty and metaphysical exploration.[21] From approximately 2010 until at least 2013, Invictus adhered to Thelema, an esoteric religious philosophy developed by Aleister Crowley in the early 20th century, emphasizing the individual's "True Will" as the highest ethical imperative—"Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law"—drawn from Crowley's reception of The Book of the Law in 1904.[71] Thelema incorporates pagan deities, ritual magic, and Hermetic influences, rejecting Abrahamic moral universalism in favor of hierarchical self-realization and cosmic individualism, which Invictus pursued through affiliation with the Ordo Templi Orientis (OTO), from which he was expelled on November 9, 2013, for undisclosed reasons.[21] This period marked his eclectic spirituality as a deliberate quest for unmediated truth beyond institutionalized dogma, blending ancient solar symbolism with Crowley's syncretic occultism. Invictus's philosophical outlook during this phase echoed Nietzschean themes of the will to power, interpreting personal and existential struggle as essential to transcending mediocrity, though he framed it within Thelemic praxis rather than pure atheism.[72] He critiqued egalitarian norms as illusions stifling natural hierarchies, aligning with a realist view of human variation rooted in empirical observation of capability and drive, while drawing on Stoic resilience to endure adversity, as evidenced in his personal journals describing psychedelic experiences and voluntary ordeals for self-mastery.[73] In January 2025, Invictus publicly announced his reversion to the Catholic Faith, identifying as a traditionalist and framing the shift as a profound conversion experience detailed in his "Confessions," which reject prior esoteric paths in favor of orthodox Christian doctrine centered on Christ as divine truth.[74] This evolution signifies a pivot from pagan-occult eclecticism to monotheistic fidelity, motivated by what he describes as a revelatory confrontation with ultimate reality, though he retains echoes of his earlier emphasis on disciplined will and rejection of modern relativism.[74]

Family and Relationships

Augustus Sol Invictus, born Austin Mitchell Gillespie on July 31, 1984, is the son of John Gillespie.[9] He married Anna Jolene Arceneaux, who adopted the surname Invictus during the marriage.[75] The couple had multiple children together.[76] The marriage ended in separation, with Invictus filing for divorce in Orange County, Florida, on September 8, 2020, followed by another filing in Seminole County on October 17, 2022.[75][77] Domestic strains contributed to the dissolution, including a 2019 incident in South Carolina where Invictus was charged with kidnapping his wife at gunpoint in the presence of their children and domestic violence of a high and aggravated nature; he was acquitted on both counts in April 2022 after a jury deliberated for less than 30 minutes.[65][76] In April 2020, following his release on bond from the South Carolina case amid COVID-19 concerns, Invictus faced additional charges in Orange County, Florida, for stalking his ex-wife, allegedly using their children to track her location; his father, John Gillespie, was charged in connection with the same incident two days earlier.[9][66] The public nature of Invictus's activism and legal battles exacerbated familial tensions during this period.[78]

References

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