Judge denies child custody to white supremacist who turned up at court last month in full Nazi regalia

Heath Campbell has eight children by four women and his latest fiancee is expecting a daughter to be called Eva Braun



Last month he turned up at a New Jersey courthouse in Nazi regalia, including swastika armbands, to request custody of his son Heinrich Hons



Campbell has said he will appeal Thursday's decision

A judge has denied custody to white supremacist Heath Campbell, the New Jersey man who attended a court hearing last month dressed in a full Nazi uniform as he sought to get back his youngest child.



Campbell, 40, is father to eight children by four different women. He lives off of government assistance and his current fiancee is expecting his ninth child later this year.



He attended the June hearing held at Hunterdon County Family Court in Flemington, N.J., to determine whether he could visit with his 2-year-old son Heinrich Hons.

New Jersey Nazi dad Heath Campbell, pictured with fiancee Bethanie Zito, has lost his battle to gain custody of his two-year-old son Heinrich Hons





Campbell, 40, is father to eight children by four different women and his current fiancee, right, is expecting his ninth child later this year

Heinrich Hons was the fourth child - all with Nazi-inspired names - that Campbell had with his last wife Deborah. He was removed from his parents just hours after being born in November 2011.

The New Jersey Division of Youth and Family Services said they took the boy because violence in the home.

They had already placed the couple's other three children – Adolf Hitler Campbell, 7, JoyceLynn Aryan Nation Campbell, 6, and 5-year-old Honzlynn Jeannie Campbell – in foster care because of the alleged violence in the family's Holland Township, N.J. home.

The couple said they never abused their children and argued they were being targeted for the names they chose for their kids.



Nazi dad Campbell and fiancee Bethanie Zito are expecting a daughter - to be named Eva Braun - later this year

White supremacist Campbell, his swastika tattoo on show, said he wanted to show the world he could be a good father when he appeared at court last month

Campbell has said he will appeal Thursday’s decision, reports NBC 10 .



Deborah Campbell gave up rights to her children after separating from her husband.



The Nazi-inspired names first came to light after a store refused to decorate a birthday cake reading 'Happy birthday Adolf Hitler' in December 2008.

In 2010, a New Jersey appeals court ruled there was sufficient evidence of abuse or neglect due to prior domestic violence to seize the children.



Authorities insisted putting the children into care had nothing to do with their names.

Court records from previous hearings show that the oldest child, Adolf, frequently threatened to kill people.

Deborah Campbell reportedly had once given a note to her neighbor saying she was terrified of her husband, who had threatened to kill her.

Heath and Deborah Campbell, pictured with the son they named Adolf Hitler, the couple have since separated

Rescued: Adolf Hitler, right, and his sister Aryan Nation were taken into custody in 2009 and have since been adopted

The 40-year-old white supremacist appeared at last month's hearing in knee-high black boots and swastika patches and was accompanied by his latest fiancee Bethanie Rose Zito .



Days after the hearing Campbell proposed to her in front of a water fountain in Easton, Pennsylvania, once again dressed in full Nazi regalia. Both have swastika tattoos on their necks.

The 40 year old, whose body is covered in swastika tattoos and who heads a neo-Nazi group, told the Daily News that he isn't taking any chances with the birth of his next child.



'In July, I’m shipping [my fiancée] to a neo-Nazi compound down South,' he told the Daily News. 'There’s no way in the world they’re going to find out where this child is.'

The couple are expecting a baby girl and are planning to name her Eva Braun after HItler's long-time girlfriend who married him just 40 hours before they both committed suicide.