The parents who were outraged when a supermarket refused to print their son's name Adolf Hitler on a birthday cake have had all three of their children taken into custody.
Heath and Deborah Campbell's children, three-year-old Adolf and younger sisters JoyceLynn Aryan Nation and Honszlynn Hinler Jeannie, were removed by New Jersey social workers on Tuesday.
The Division of Youth and Family Services has refused to comment on the reason behind their action.
The Campbells made international headlines last month when supermarket chain ShopRite refused to inscribe a cake for little Adolf's third birthday.
The Holocaust deniers, who have swastikas in every room of their rented house, described the incident as "sad".
"Other kids get their cake. I get a hard time," Lehigh Valley Live News reported Mr Campbell, 35, as saying.
"It's not fair to my children."
A Wal-Mart store was slammed in the media for later agreeing to the Campbell's cake request.
"They say, 'He (Hitler) killed all those people' ... I say, 'You're living in the wrong decade. That Hitler's gone'," Mr Campbell said.
"Yeah, they [Nazis] were bad people back then but my kids are little they're not going to grow up like that.
"Other kids get their cake, I get a hard time."
JoyceLynn Aryan Nation and Honszlynn Hinler Jeannie Campbell, who is named after notorious Schutzstaffel head Heinrich Himmler, will turn two and one early this year.
Both Heath and Deborah Campbell, 24, are both unemployed due to alleged disabilities.