Jailed last month on an aggravated assault charge, Isidore Heath Campbell is one focus of a new documentary available for streaming online.

"Meet the Hitlers" tells the story of Campbell and notoriety he found, starting with a December 2008 article in The Express-Times about the refusal by ShopRite in Greenwich Township to decorate a birthday cake with the name of his son Adolf Hitler Campbell.

A trailer shows Heath Campbell talking about his tattoos and his views against racial integration.

"I have different beliefs, you know, I believe in whites with whites, blacks with blacks, you know, Spanish with Spanish," he says. "I mean, I don't see anything wrong with that."

Campbell's attorney, Pasquale Giannetta, asserts it is the name of Campbell's oldest child that sparked the state investigation that led to his continued denial of visitation rights. Adolf Hitler Campbell, now 10, has siblings with similarly Nazi Germany-inspired names: JoyceLynn Aryan Nation, Honszlynn Jeannie and Heinrich Hinler Hons.

"A person makes a person," Campbell says in the documentary. "A name doesn't."

The first news coverage of Heath Campbell's family came in the Dec. 14, 2008, editions of The Express-Times, and the New Jersey Division of Youth and Family Services visited their Holland Township home Dec. 17, he says in the documentary.

"They treated us like we were pieces of garbage," he says in the documentary, asserting his children were never physically abused while in his custody.

Isidore Heath Campbell (Courtesy photo | For lehighvalleylive.com)

Campbell was arrested March 10 in Shippensburg, Pennsylvania, on a Holland Township warrant for his arrest issued last October. The assault charge stems from an incident involving his girlfriend, Bethanie Zito, who has since recanted her accusation that Campbell struck her. Prosecutors said they are proceeding without her cooperation in an evidence-based case against Campbell.

Campbell was ordered held in lieu of $10,000 cash bail, and records show he remained incarcerated Monday night.

"Meet the Hitlers," according to its imdb.com entry is "a feature documentary that examines the relationship between names and identity, by exploring the lives of people who are linked by the name Hitler."

The filmmakers say it is available starting Tuesday on DVD and is also available for streaming on iTunes and Amazon.

Kurt Bresswein may be reached at kbresswein@lehighvalleylive.com. Follow him on Twitter @KurtBresswein. Find lehighvalleylive.com on Facebook.