The Klu Klux Klan is in the midst of a massive recruitment drive following the recent South Carolina church shooting where nine African-American churchgoers were gunned down by Dylan Roof.

According to the Daily Beast, before any of the victims could so much as be laid to rest Americans from California, Kansas, Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia awoke to find fliers stuffed in plastic baggies sprawled across their front lawns. In between the pieces of peppermint and Tootsie Rolls was a phone urging them to make contact with Loyal White Knights.

At the same time, a voice recording left at the organization's North Carolina based headquarters spews, "We in the Loyal White Knights of the KKK would like to say hail victory to ... Dylan S. Roof who decided to do what the Bible told him. An eye for an eye. A tooth for a tooth. They [black people] have spilled our blood too long. It's about time someone spilled theirs."

Roof is the man accused of opening fire earlier this month inside the sanctuary of the Emmanuel AME Church, killing nine parishioners including the church's pastor.

As for all the unsolicited literature now being tossed about, some law enforcement officials have sought the assistance of the FBI in trying to keep all the rising tensions to a minimum.

"Whether it was a joke or from an organization doesn't matter to me," Rockdale County Sheriff Eric Levett told The Daily Beast. "The fact that it was done during this time is ignorant and cowardly."

Since his capture, authorities have uncovered a lengthy "manifesto" reportedly handwritten by Roof where he openly shares hopes of inciting a "race war." The 21-year-old is now being held at the North Charleston Jail without bail.

Royal White Knights in North Carolina grand dragon Robert Jones tried convincing the Daily Beast the organization is merely undergoing a national recruitment drive that simply happens to coincide with the timing of the South Carolina killings.

"We're doing this from the East Coast to the West Coast, just to let people know the Klan's in their community," said Jones. "Especially with all the stuff that's in the news -- in South Carolina they're wanting to take the Confederate flag down."