Plagued John Cameron Denton & Atomwaffen Division / Siegeculture - Satanic Vampire Neo-Nazis, autistic Strasserists, Helter Skelter cult

  • We're mostly back to 100%. Expect more disruptions that will cause sister service outages for the forseeable future.

Pick your ideology

  • Strasserist

    Votes: 92 12.5%
  • Satanist

    Votes: 160 21.8%
  • Baby Killer

    Votes: 182 24.8%
  • Nazbol (Nazi and also Commie)

    Votes: 301 41.0%

  • Total voters
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KiwiNexion

kiwifarms.net
One of these things is not like the others. Also great job waiting until AWD basically doesn't even exist any more to designate it a terror group.
Meanwhile Rinaldo Nazzaro of The Base is posting responses to every article that mentions him on Periscope and Telegram.
That says it all about their activity anyway.

I assume the United States will be following suit with the Proud Boys. Quite dishonest to throw them together with the Atomwaffen Division.
 

Hesa

kiwifarms.net
Meanwhile Rinaldo Nazzaro of The Base is posting responses to every article that mentions him on Periscope and Telegram.
That says it all about their activity anyway.

I assume the United States will be following suit with the Proud Boys. Quite dishonest to throw them together with the Atomwaffen Division.


Nuanced viewpoints and reasoning are not their strong points.
 

Hesa

kiwifarms.net
From bits I've read it sounds like there maybe a RICO investigation into what happened on Jan 6th with the various groups. That will fuck things up for people like the PBs and Oath Keepers.
 

ulsterscotsman

᚛ᚂᚐᚋᚆ ᚇᚆᚓᚐᚏᚌ ᚐᚁᚒ᚜
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net

Former neo-Nazi to KING 5 reporter he targeted: 'I just want to apologize'​

21-year-old Johnny Roman Garza is looking to atone for what he did as a member of the Atomwaffen Division.​

A former member of the Atomwaffen Division, a neo-Nazi group that threatened journalists and persons of color in Washington state and across the country, has a message before he reports to federal prison later this month.​

“I just want to apologize,” said 21-year-old Johnny Roman Garza from his parent’s home outside of Phoenix, Arizona.

Garza made his apology during a Zoom interview with KING 5’s Chris Ingalls, one of the victims of what the FBI says was a conspiracy to threaten and cyberstalk persons of color and journalists who reported on the group’s activities.

“It’s simply just evil and I didn’t realize how evil it was, you know? Professing to be wise, I was actually a fool,” Garza said.

Last month, Garza was sentenced to 16 months in federal prison for putting a threatening poster up on the home of the editor of a prominent Jewish newspaper in Arizona and attempting to do the same thing at the home of a Black reporter.

The poster depicted a figure in a skull mask holding a Molotov cocktail in front of a burning home. The poster included the victim’s name and address and said, “Your actions have consequences … you have been visited by your local Nazis.”

In encrypted chats intercepted by the FBI, Garza told at least three other Atomwaffen participants the plot was to “… have them all wake up one morning and find themselves terrorized by targeted propaganda,” according to court documents.

“I see now how wrong that I was,” Garza told KING 5.

Garza revealed insights into how a sinister group such as Atomwaffen pulls what he calls “despondent” young people into its grip.

Garza, who is now 21, is a “…troubled man with a chaotic home life,” according to documents filed in court by federal lawyers in Seattle who are prosecuting the case. Records say Garza grew up in a lonely environment, without much of a formal education.

That left him primed for recruitment by a hate group such as Atomwaffen.
“(They) kind of made me feel like they were my only friends, that was where I belonged,” Garza said of the period less than two years ago when he first started chatting online with Atomwaffen leaders.

They talked about crime statistics in which whites were victimized, their twisted views of science and other racially charged topics.

“I was completely cut off (from my family). My heart was darkened. I really just wasn’t even thinking that far ahead. I was kind of concerned with me, myself and I,” Garza said.

He added that drug use and an undiagnosed mental illness (court records say he was recently diagnosed bi-polar) distorted his logic.

The FBI has identified Atomwaffen as a violent extremist group, with possible connections to other extremist organizations overseas. Atomwaffen (German for “nuclear weapon”) follows the teachings of Adolf Hitler and US mass-murderer Charles Manson who convinced his followers in the 1960’s to kill in the hopes of sparking a race war.

“That’s what they think will happen is that the country will just collapse, and it will turn into this post-apocalyptic thing,” Garza said.

Atomwaffen members have been charged or convicted of five murders nationwide. In one case in 2017, a mentally ill Atomwaffen member killed two other members claiming that they disrespected him, according to police reports.

Another member is in prison in Florida for a failed bomb plot.
Court documents say 25-year-old Kaleb Cole of Snohomish county and Brandon Shae, 24, of Redmond were two Atomwaffen leaders who organized the conspiracy to threaten journalists and minorities. Both pleaded “not guilty” to federal charges and are awaiting trial.

In addition to Garza’s plea and sentencing, Taylor Parker-Dipeppe of Florida already admitted to his part in the conspiracy and is awaiting sentencing.

Garza says he never knew any of the true identities of the Atomwaffen members with whom he conspired.

“I didn’t know anything about them. I mean, I knew them by screen names,” Garza said.
The KING 5 Investigators have reported extensively since 2019 on Atomwaffen’s presence in Washington state, and the weapons cache that local authorities seized from Kaleb Cole in Arlington.

Court records say Cole helped organize “hate camps”, including one in the wilderness of Skagit county, where members from across the country came for live-fire training with firearms. Recruitment videos KING 5 found online show Atomwaffen members burning various flags and practicing urban combat with guns.

Garza says he never took part in any hate camps and he did not own a gun.
KING 5’s Chris Ingalls received a threatening poster in the mail in January of 2020, which was allegedly sent by Shae as part of the conspiracy. Ingalls was tipped just prior to that by the FBI that Atomwaffen was planning a visit to his home. He and his family left his home for a short period while the Joint Terrorism Task Force surveilled his residence. No one showed on the appointed weekend, but the threatening letter arrived in the mail a few days later.

“I know that you, yourself, Chris were one of the victims,” Garza said during his interview with Ingalls. “I want to apologize for that, too, because technically with the conspiracy I’m culpable for it,” he said.

Garza also apologized to the journalists in Arizona whom he personally targeted.
One of them was Mala Blomquist, editor of Arizona Jewish Life, who told KING 5 she’s “…torn between wanting him to be punished and giving him a second chance.”
Garza glued a threatening poster to the window of her home.

“Garza really seems to understand the depth of what he has done. I think he is remorseful,” she said.
Blomquist, who is not Jewish, said the sad reality of managing a Jewish newspaper is that staff is subjected to racist comments and threats routinely.

Garza insists that he never had a burning hatred for any minority group, but he says his experience with Atomwaffen did “desensitize” him to other races and cultures.

“That’s kind of the strangeness with blatant just racism. It’s kind of looking at someone only for their race instead of a complete person,” he said.

Garza says his arrest last February and a subsequent stint in jail shook him free from Atomwaffen’s grip. He says he is living a more stable life and has turned to reading the Bible.

He consented to an interview with KING 5 as part of his attempt to atone for his bad behavior.
“I see how wrong that I was. It’s really hard to explain yourself after the fact,” he said. “But I’m serving my sentence, so that’s all I can say.”

Garza begins serving his 16 months in mid-January and has already reached out to the anti-Defamation league and other advocacy groups to see if he can provide helpful insight on white supremacist groups.

He has also offered his services to federal authorities “…to offer to assist law enforcement in helping to attack the recruitment tools of similar groups in the future,” according to court records.




That looks like a classic know surrender.
What a fag lol! Instantly breaks, betrays his beliefs then tries to sell his former friends down river.
How many young people are in jail now because of these AWD type groups?
One of these things is not like the others. Also great job waiting until AWD basically doesn't even exist any more to designate it a terror group.
Designated for what? None of them have even done anything worth a fuck to earn getting registered.
 

GranDuke

kiwifarms.net
I assume the United States will be following suit with the Proud Boys. Quite dishonest to throw them together with the Atomwaffen Division.
I don't know, both are tards? We sure can explain why one is worse than the other, but I'm not sure if it really is worth the trouble.
 

Hesa

kiwifarms.net

Grand Prairie man who urged killing Blacks and Jews is charged with gun crime​

Christian Michael Mackey, 20, is charged with illegally selling a gun to a felon. He had called for the killing of Jews and Blacks in a neo-Nazi chat group, a federal complaint says.



An alleged white nationalist and self-described “radical Jew slayer” who encouraged others to kill Jews and Blacks has been charged in federal court with illegally selling a gun to a felon, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

Christian Michael Mackey, 20, was charged with unlawful sale of a firearm, according to a criminal complaint.

FBI agents arrested him at a parking lot near his Grand Prairie home on Friday evening, authorities said. He made his initial appearance in federal court on Monday, and prosecutors have filed a motion to detain him until trial.

He faces up to 10 years in federal prison if convicted. An attorney for Mackey could not be reached.

Mackey regularly posted in online chats organized by the Iron Youth, a Neo-Nazi and white nationalist group dedicated to National Socialism and political terror, authorities said. The group pushes a “siege” ideology that calls for antigovernment terrorist attacks as a way to instigate a race war.

Mackey allegedly said on Instagram that he liked “control and killing” and vowed to die attacking the system. He also urged fellow group members to kill Jews and Blacks, authorities said.

Mackey met with an undercover FBI agent in December to discuss selling his rifle so he could buy another firearm, the complaint said. He said that another Iron Youth member had recommended an untraceable “ghost-gun,” a homemade pistol without a serial number, according to the FBI.
The agent helped arrange a sale and warned Mackey that the buyer was a felon. Mackey said he didn’t care who bought it, and on Jan. 29 he sold his AM-15 to a FBI source with felony convictions for $800 at a Grand Prairie parking lot, authorities said.

Mackey asked the buyer if she was “based,” a term used to describe someone who embraces white supremacist ideology, the complaint says.

“This defendant’s indiscriminate sale of an AM-15 to a convicted felon could have put lives at risk, had the buyer not turned the gun over to the FBI,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Prerak Shah, in a statement. “Although adherence to a repugnant ideology is not a crime in and of itself, unlawful sale is, and we are determined to hold Mr. Mackey accountable.”

Mackey incited others in the Iron Youth group to violence, the complaint said. In a July 2019 Instagram group chat, one user expressed a desire to train for a “devastating” attack on the system and to die an “infamous historical figure,” according to the FBI.

Mackey responded by saying, “Yea I’m just trying to live long enough to die attacking the system,” the complaint says. He said if the group keeps pushing for training and “off the grid activities,” they could recruit enough members to “cause a collapse,” authorities said.

He also wrote in the Instagram chat group in August 2019 that he’d been looking at Nazi websites since 2016 and grew up antigovernment like his father, the FBI says.

“The FBI’s investigative focus is on criminal activity, regardless of group affiliation,” Matthew J. DeSarno, who heads the Dallas FBI office, said in a statement.



 

tantric_depressive

Be kind, REEEEEE
kiwifarms.net

Grand Prairie man who urged killing Blacks and Jews is charged with gun crime​

Christian Michael Mackey, 20, is charged with illegally selling a gun to a felon. He had called for the killing of Jews and Blacks in a neo-Nazi chat group, a federal complaint says.



An alleged white nationalist and self-described “radical Jew slayer” who encouraged others to kill Jews and Blacks has been charged in federal court with illegally selling a gun to a felon, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

Christian Michael Mackey, 20, was charged with unlawful sale of a firearm, according to a criminal complaint.

FBI agents arrested him at a parking lot near his Grand Prairie home on Friday evening, authorities said. He made his initial appearance in federal court on Monday, and prosecutors have filed a motion to detain him until trial.

He faces up to 10 years in federal prison if convicted. An attorney for Mackey could not be reached.

Mackey regularly posted in online chats organized by the Iron Youth, a Neo-Nazi and white nationalist group dedicated to National Socialism and political terror, authorities said. The group pushes a “siege” ideology that calls for antigovernment terrorist attacks as a way to instigate a race war.

Mackey allegedly said on Instagram that he liked “control and killing” and vowed to die attacking the system. He also urged fellow group members to kill Jews and Blacks, authorities said.

Mackey met with an undercover FBI agent in December to discuss selling his rifle so he could buy another firearm, the complaint said. He said that another Iron Youth member had recommended an untraceable “ghost-gun,” a homemade pistol without a serial number, according to the FBI.
The agent helped arrange a sale and warned Mackey that the buyer was a felon. Mackey said he didn’t care who bought it, and on Jan. 29 he sold his AM-15 to a FBI source with felony convictions for $800 at a Grand Prairie parking lot, authorities said.

Mackey asked the buyer if she was “based,” a term used to describe someone who embraces white supremacist ideology, the complaint says.

“This defendant’s indiscriminate sale of an AM-15 to a convicted felon could have put lives at risk, had the buyer not turned the gun over to the FBI,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Prerak Shah, in a statement. “Although adherence to a repugnant ideology is not a crime in and of itself, unlawful sale is, and we are determined to hold Mr. Mackey accountable.”

Mackey incited others in the Iron Youth group to violence, the complaint said. In a July 2019 Instagram group chat, one user expressed a desire to train for a “devastating” attack on the system and to die an “infamous historical figure,” according to the FBI.

Mackey responded by saying, “Yea I’m just trying to live long enough to die attacking the system,” the complaint says. He said if the group keeps pushing for training and “off the grid activities,” they could recruit enough members to “cause a collapse,” authorities said.

He also wrote in the Instagram chat group in August 2019 that he’d been looking at Nazi websites since 2016 and grew up antigovernment like his father, the FBI says.

“The FBI’s investigative focus is on criminal activity, regardless of group affiliation,” Matthew J. DeSarno, who heads the Dallas FBI office, said in a statement.



A dude this suicidally stupid and loud n proud about it is lucky he had what seemed a half-hearted agent working his case. Instead of being stitched up in a phantom bomb plot that'd get him life, he's arrested for an actual crime that someone with half-a-brain would've backed out of when talk of selling to a felon came up

Also, protip to anyone reading that actually takes this accelerationist bs seriously - if you have never been able to achieve anything under the current system, you sure as fuck ain't gonna achieve it in RoadWar Anarchy World - Satanic Edition. You'll probably end up being the dudes chained ass-out to the grills of the rape caravan trucks
 
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Hesa

kiwifarms.net

KiwiNexion

kiwifarms.net

Grand Prairie man who urged killing Blacks and Jews is charged with gun crime​

Christian Michael Mackey, 20, is charged with illegally selling a gun to a felon. He had called for the killing of Jews and Blacks in a neo-Nazi chat group, a federal complaint says.



An alleged white nationalist and self-described “radical Jew slayer” who encouraged others to kill Jews and Blacks has been charged in federal court with illegally selling a gun to a felon, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

Christian Michael Mackey, 20, was charged with unlawful sale of a firearm, according to a criminal complaint.

FBI agents arrested him at a parking lot near his Grand Prairie home on Friday evening, authorities said. He made his initial appearance in federal court on Monday, and prosecutors have filed a motion to detain him until trial.

He faces up to 10 years in federal prison if convicted. An attorney for Mackey could not be reached.

Mackey regularly posted in online chats organized by the Iron Youth, a Neo-Nazi and white nationalist group dedicated to National Socialism and political terror, authorities said. The group pushes a “siege” ideology that calls for antigovernment terrorist attacks as a way to instigate a race war.

Mackey allegedly said on Instagram that he liked “control and killing” and vowed to die attacking the system. He also urged fellow group members to kill Jews and Blacks, authorities said.

Mackey met with an undercover FBI agent in December to discuss selling his rifle so he could buy another firearm, the complaint said. He said that another Iron Youth member had recommended an untraceable “ghost-gun,” a homemade pistol without a serial number, according to the FBI.
The agent helped arrange a sale and warned Mackey that the buyer was a felon. Mackey said he didn’t care who bought it, and on Jan. 29 he sold his AM-15 to a FBI source with felony convictions for $800 at a Grand Prairie parking lot, authorities said.

Mackey asked the buyer if she was “based,” a term used to describe someone who embraces white supremacist ideology, the complaint says.

“This defendant’s indiscriminate sale of an AM-15 to a convicted felon could have put lives at risk, had the buyer not turned the gun over to the FBI,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Prerak Shah, in a statement. “Although adherence to a repugnant ideology is not a crime in and of itself, unlawful sale is, and we are determined to hold Mr. Mackey accountable.”

Mackey incited others in the Iron Youth group to violence, the complaint said. In a July 2019 Instagram group chat, one user expressed a desire to train for a “devastating” attack on the system and to die an “infamous historical figure,” according to the FBI.

Mackey responded by saying, “Yea I’m just trying to live long enough to die attacking the system,” the complaint says. He said if the group keeps pushing for training and “off the grid activities,” they could recruit enough members to “cause a collapse,” authorities said.

He also wrote in the Instagram chat group in August 2019 that he’d been looking at Nazi websites since 2016 and grew up antigovernment like his father, the FBI says.

“The FBI’s investigative focus is on criminal activity, regardless of group affiliation,” Matthew J. DeSarno, who heads the Dallas FBI office, said in a statement.



He was set up along with another one.
 

Hesa

kiwifarms.net
Sorry for the double post but the neo-nazi National Action nonce is jailed again.

RF1.jpg



Ryan Fleming: Neo-Nazi paedophile jailed for messaging children

A convicted paedophile and former member of a banned neo-Nazi terrorist group has been jailed for unsupervised contact with children.


Ryan Fleming, 30, of Horsforth, Leeds, was a regional organiser for National Action, which was outlawed in 2016.


Counter terror police who raided his home in December found he was using Instagram to message young teenagers.


On Friday he admitted breaching a sexual harm prevention order and was sentenced to six months in prison.


Sentencing him at Leeds Crown Court, Judge Mushtaq Khokar said Fleming knew “fully well” that what he was doing was forbidden.


The court heard that he used an anonymised account to message children and also joined a chat group containing young participants in which thousands of messages were exchanged.


A sexual harm prevention order, which bans Fleming from unsupervised contact with children, was imposed when he was jailed in 2017 for sexually abusing a 14-year-old girl he met on Facebook.


In 2012, he was convicted of falsely imprisoning and sexually abusing a young boy.


Fleming was prolific online, where he promoted the violent Satanist organisation Order of Nine Angles and quoted the Moors murderer Ian Brady.


He spent time as the north-east organiser of National Action, including giving speeches at rallies, before it was banned.


The group was outlawed as a terrorist organisation in 2016 and since then 15 people have been jailed for remaining members.


BBC News
 

Hesa

kiwifarms.net
pf.JPG



Accused Neo-Nazi Terrorist Charged in Prison Gang Sex Assault

Awaiting trial for his alleged involvement in a murder plot, Base member Michael Helterbrand allegedly joined a white power prison gang and sexually assaulted and burned a fellow prisoner.

Since being imprisoned last year, a member of the Georgia cell of the neo-Nazi terror group the Base joined a white power prison gang, got a face tattoo, and sexually assaulted a fellow inmate along with other members of his new skinhead gang, according to an affidavit and a criminal fact sheet.
Michael John Helterbrand, 26, has been in jail for over a year, awaiting trial for his involvement in an alleged assassination plot on an antifascist activist and his wife. He is now facing two new charges: Being party to aggravated sexual battery, and participation in the criminal street gang known as the “Ghostface Gangsters,” an ultra-violent skinhead street gang based in Georgia known for trafficking cocaine and methamphetamines.
According to the Floyd County Sheriff’s Office, Helterbrand helped two other members of the Ghostface Gangsters “insert a toothbrush into another man's anus without that man's consent.” The man was also stabbed and burned with the help of Helterbrand, who hid the weapons in his cell, all in an attempt to use the incident as a means to “move up in rank within the Ghostface Gangster criminal street gang,” according to the documents.
Helterbrand, who now has a tattoo with the words “Pale Face” in block letters across his forehead, was one of seven inmates charged by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) stemming from a December 2020 sexual assault and battery of an inmate in the Floyd County Jail, where he’s been held since January 2020.


“All seven are alleged to be members of the Ghostface Gangsters criminal street gang,” reads a GBI press release on the charges. “During the investigation, one of the inmates under investigation threatened the life of the victim resulting in additional charges.”
In 2019, Helterbrand and two other members of the Georgia cell of the Base allegedly hatched a plot to kill a local Georgia “Antifa couple” by executing the husband and wife with guns then setting their house alight with the bodies still inside. The plot was intended for February 2020 and was delayed multiple times, because, according to the affidavit, of Helterbrand’s bad back that needed recovery time from an injury. Unbeknownst to Helterbrand and his colleagues, an FBI undercover agent was among the group.
The undercover agent, who went under the alias of “Pale Horse” (not to be confused with Helterbrandt’s new forehead tattoo of “Pale Face”) when he was inside the Base, recorded the Georgia cell debating whether or not the couple had a child and what they would do if they did. Helterbrand said, “I mean I have no problem killing a commie kid” according to an affidavit that detailed the plot.

All three Georgia cell members of the Base were subsequently charged with conspiracy to commit murder at a time when the group began facing the early moments of what became a nationwide FBI crackdown.
Joanna Mendelson, the associate director of the Center on Extremism for the Anti-Defamation League told VICE World News that the Base and the Ghostface Gangsters are “quite distinct from each other.” She described the Base as being built on “Hitlerian” principles mixed with white supremacist ideology, whereas the Ghostface Gangsters are first and foremost a violent street gang where “ideology is secondary to their criminal enterprise.”
“Helterbrand’s seemingly swift embrace of yet another nefarious group speaks volumes of someone looking to belong to any organization with a propensity towards violence,” she said.


The Ghostface Gangsters are a white-supremacist criminal syndicate that started in the Georgia prison system. According to court documents, the gang was founded in 2000 by members of the Cobb County Jail in the Atlanta metropolitan area and has been growing ever since. In 2015, national prosecutors said that the criminal organization had over 3,000 members and is deeply connected to drug trafficking in the state. It’s been reported that the gang has ties with well known white supremacist gangs like the Aryan Brotherhood. The group has been the subject of multiple law enforcement actions including one dubbed “Vanilla Gorilla Project” in which 43 defendents plead guilty to charges that included drug trafficking, counterfeiting and illegal firearm possession.
With a former Pentagon contractor (now suspiciously living in Russia) as the founder and leader, the Base is considered one of the most violent American domestic terror groups in decades and was recently designated a terrorist organization by the Canadian government. Since late 2019, nine members of the Base have been arrested in the U.S. for alleged crimes as wide-ranging as an assassination plot, ghost-gun making, plans for train derailments, and a mass shooting.


 

AnOminous

each malted milk ball might be their last
True & Honest Fan
Retired Staff
kiwifarms.net
This is a classic.


Soldier indicted for conspiring with neo-Nazi group seeks dismissal because grand jury wasn't racially diverse​

The legal argument is plausible on its face, and is generally called a Batson challenge, although possibly it's called something else if you're challenging a grand jury. (It is.)

The Sixth Amendment guarantees a criminal defendant a grand jury selected from a fair
cross-section of the community. Taylor v. Louisiana, 419 U.S. 522, 530, (1975). Mr. Melzer’s
right under the Sixth Amendment to a grand jury drawn from a fair cross-section of the
community applies to the grand jury that indicted him. See, e.g., United States v. Osorio, 801 F.
Supp. 966, 973-74 (D. Conn. 1992).

It's the facts that I'm finding difficult to prove. The prosecutors had to have done something like the "systematic exclusion" the defendant is accusing them of.

Here's the actual motion:
And the government's opposition: https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.539116/gov.uscourts.nysd.539116.49.0.pdf

My purely off the cuff guess is this is unlikely to succeed but their creativity is admirable. The government's brief seems to have the best of it in terms of citations. Also, would this mean anyone indicted in White Plains automatically has had their rights violated? That doesn't seem reasonable.
 
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