Showing posts with label Boogaloo Boys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boogaloo Boys. Show all posts

Dec 17, 2020

Boogaloo Bois member pleads guilty to trying to sell weapons to Hamas

Andy Mannix
Star Tribune
December 16, 2020

A member of the anti-government Boogaloo Bois pleaded guilty Wednesday to attempting to provide weapons to Hamas, a designated terrorist organization, in the days and weeks following protests over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

Benjamin Ryan Teeter, 22, could face up to 20 years in prison for the federal felony. His sentencing has not been scheduled.

Appearing via video and wearing orange jail garb, Teeter told U.S. District Judge Michael Davis that he came to Minneapolis from North Carolina after Floyd's death. He and Michael Robert Solomon, 30, another Boogaloo Bois member who's charged with the same crimes, met several times with two men they believed represented Hamas, but who were actually working covertly for the federal government. Teeter and Solomon negotiated selling gun suppressors and a "drop in auto sear" — a device that converts semi-automatic weapons into illegal machine guns, according to charges.

Teeter acknowledged in court he believed the materials would be used by the militant wing of Hamas. "I mean, why would someone buy suppressors if they weren't going to deliver them to a militant wing?" he said.

Teeter said they hoped Hamas would help them "to exit the country and open a training facility" for Boogaloo Bois, a loose-knit, far-right group bent on starting the next American civil war. He and Solomon also planned to bomb a courthouse in northern Minnesota, and then changed their target to an unspecified courthouse in the Twin Cities, he said in court Wednesday.

"This case highlights the real threat posed by domestic violent extremists who self-radicalize and threaten to violently attack others opposed to their views, with little or no warning," said Michael Paul, special agent in charge of the FBI's Minneapolis field office, which led the investigation.

According to court documents, Teeter, of North Carolina, is part of a group called "Boojahideen," a subgroup of the Boogaloo Bois. Around the time of the riots, he and Solomon "discussed committing acts of violence against police officers and other targets in furtherance of the Boojahideen's stated goal of overthrowing the government and replacing its police forces," a witness told the FBI. They talked about destroying government monuments, raiding the headquarters of a white supremacist organization in North Carolina and targeting politicians and members of the media, according to court documents.

In recorded conversations, Teeter and Solomon told undercover government sources they wanted to become mercenaries for Hamas to generate cash for the Boogaloo movement, and that they shared anti-U.S. government views, according to court documents. They met several times with undercover employees for the FBI, and in July they purchased a large drill press to make the suppressors. Teeter and Solomon delivered five suppressors to undercover sources on July 30 and agreed to make more, which they believed "would be used against Israeli and United States military personnel overseas," according to court documents.

"The defendant was a self-described member of the Boogaloo Bois whose extremist ideologies had moved into the realm of violent action," said Minnesota U.S. Attorney Erica MacDonald. "I am grateful for the quick and effective action by law enforcement to keep our community safe."

In addition to Teeter and Solomon, another Boogaloo member, Ivan Hunter, is also facing federal charges related to the Floyd riots. Hunter allegedly shot a rifle 13 times into the burning Minneapolis Third Precinct, while people were inside, in an attempt to achieve the Boogaloo Bois' goal of ramping up violence and starting a civil war.

Andy Mannix covers federal courts and law enforcement for the Star Tribune. He joined the paper in January 2016 and previously covered Minneapolis City Hall and statewide criminal justice/Department of Corrections. 
andy.mannix@startribune.com 612-673-4036 AndrewMannix

https://m.startribune.com/boogaloo-bois-member-pleads-guilty-to-trying-to-sell-weapons-to-hamas-after-minneapolis-riots/573410351/

Jun 27, 2020

Extremist activity is growing in the pandemic. How worried should Jews be?

Ari Feldman
The Forward
June 27, 2020

  
On the last day of Passover last year, a young nursing student went into the Chabad of Poway synagogue and shot four people, killing 60-year-old Lori Gilbert-Kaye.


The accused murderer’s manifesto was filled with anti-Semitic sentiments, but it also contained another element: The shooter’s wish that his actions would lead the government to start confiscating guns, and thus provoke a “civil war” between white nationalists and everyone else.

“If this revolution doesn’t happen soon, we won’t have the numbers to win it,” the alleged murderer wrote. “Stop the slow boil of the frog. Make the Jew play all of his cards to make it apparent to more people how their rights are being taken away right before their eyes.”

This idea is called accelerationism — and over the past two years, its popularity has jumped dramatically in online extremist communities, tied to their excitement over anti-Semitic attacks. In the last month, accelerationist extremists have grown increasingly active, in response both to the pandemic and the anti-racist protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd.

Experts worry that, as these groups become more brazen, they will carry out physical, violent attacks against minority communities — especially Jewish ones.

Civil unrest and economic decline “may induce individuals to plan and undertake targeted attacks as our facilities reopen,” said Michael Masters, the CEO of the Secure Community Network, the Jewish community’s largest provider of security training and policy. “That is a reality.”

The Boogaloo

The most prominent accelerationist group to come out of the pandemic so far is called the Boogaloo Boys, a complex, anti-establishment movement that researchers say is not strictly tied to anti-Semitic sentiment — but whose propensity for violence may have cascading effects for all minority communities, including Jews.

“Boogaloo” is internet extremist slang for a second civil war. Though the term and its meaning have existed for years, the group has exploded onto the national scene over the past six months. Their members have been seen at protests and political rallies over the past several weeks, in their trademark Hawaiian floral shirts under bulletproof vests, often armed with assault rifles. Various Boogaloo groups have different political philosophies, but all of them seek the armed overthrow of the government.

Members of the movement use the Boogaloo as “a meme that fantasizes about a violent uprising against the state, and violence waged towards the law enforcement community and government officials that they perceive as an enemy,” said Alex Goldenberg, a lead intelligence analyst at the Network Contagion Research Institute, a Princeton-based group that studies online extremism.

While the movement is not inherently anti-Semitic, there are white supremacists and neo-Nazis on its fringes, Goldenberg said. Paul Nehlen, a white supremacist in Wisconsin who mounted two unsuccessful campaigns for Congress, has posted a picture of himself wearing a shirt emblazoned with the face of the Poway shooter over the word “BOOGALOO.” The Anti-Defamation League reported last year that a white supremacist group shared lyrics to a song called “Do the Boogaloo” on an encrypted group chat, with lines like “Kill the kikes and save the whites” and “Plug a pig and then a Yid.”



Paul Nehlen, a white supremacist and far-right figure, wearing a shirt with a picture of the Poway shooter over the word “BOOGALOO.”
Paul Nehlen, a white supremacist and far-right figure, wearing a shirt with a picture of the Poway shooter over the word “BOOGALOO.”

The past few months has seen two alleged Boogaloo Boys face charges for murder and attempted murder of federal agents, and three other men arrested for allegedlying trying to firebomb a Black Lives Matter protest. On Thursday, a chat platform shut down a Boogaloo server over extensive threats of violence.

“They have shown that they’re willing to cross a line and use firearms for their beliefs,” said Thomas Holt, director of the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University. Holt said he was concerned that other groups who admire the Boogaloo Boys’ efforts might try to replicate their success (and current media attention) by targeting Jews.

Rising anti-Semitism


The Jewish community is already plenty on edge after four deadly attacks in two years, which have caused the deaths of 17 people: the Tree of Life synagogue massacre, in Pittsburgh; the Poway shooting; the Jersey City, N.J. shooting; and the machete attack in Monsey, N.Y.

Other incidents, less deadly but no less dangerous or traumatizing, are also on the upswing. FBI data found that violent assaults against Jews grew from 2017 to 2018. In its audit of anti-Semitic incidents of 2019, the Anti-Defamation League counted 61 total anti-Semitic assaults that year, a more than 50% increase from 2018 — even though only 13% of all anti-Semitic incidents were carried out by people with ties to extremist groups.

Online anti-Semitic activity was already trending upward before the pandemic, but since it began, it has spiked even further, researchers say. A report from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a London think tank, found that online communities that shared both COVID-19 disinformation and “race war” propaganda also shared media and messages linking Jews and Muslims to the creation of the coronavirus.

A growing number of Internet users are also sharing more conspiracy theories about the Jewish financier George Soros, blaming him for allegedly creating the coronavirus and accusing him of “staging” Floyd’s killing.

The current situation, with millions of people unemployed or otherwise stuck at home with nothing to do but surf the web, “has created a funnel” to extremist organizations, said Jason Blazakis, director of the Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and Counterterrorism at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey.

People radicalized by exposure to anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, as well as angered or scared by the unprecedented state of the country, may grow to support the accelerationist theory, supported both by violent white nationalist groups and the Boogaloo Boys, that only armed violence (against the government, or against Jews) will make things better.

Some veteran white nationalist leaders have long expressed concern that the “optics” of violent uprising ultimately hurt their movement — consider how many racists were arrested or lost their jobs as a result of the 2017 Charlottesville white nationalist march. But all it takes is one exception: Before killing 11 Jews, the Tree of Life shooter posted online, “Screw your optics, I’m going in.”

“We’re seeing the growth of the accelerationist wing, which openly embraces terroristic violence as a political tool, because the question of optics now holds far less weight,” a Southern Poverty Law Center researcher wrote on Tuesday.

Security experts worry that some of the newer recruits may feel they have something to prove — and that they’ll go after the people considered the most ambitious target: Jewish communities who they think control global events.

“The Jewish community is the primary target of all the hate and all the anger and all the conspiratorial thinking that goes along with this,” said Amarnath Amarasingam, a professor of religion at Queen’s University in Ontario, Canada, who studies terrorism and radicalization. “If any of these guys tip over into violence in a real sense, the Jewish community is always top of mind as a potential target for a lot of these people.”

How concerned should the Jewish community be?
Law enforcement appears to be deeply attuned to these groups’ activities. FBI probes have already this year resulted in the dismantling of The Base, and the Atomwaffen Division, two violent white supremacist groups. Law enforcement agencies now list “white supremaicst extremists” under “High” in their threat assessment reports, while jihadists threats are marked “Low.”

And while there have been several right-wing terrorist plots mounted against Jewish communities over the past year — an attempted bombing of a synagogue in Pueblo, Colo.; a plot to bomb a Jewish nursing home; a plan to spread coronavirus to Jews — they have failed or been foiled by law enforcement.

The Jewish community also has a strong security apparatus in place, one which has seen an injection of funding over the past year. The Secure Community Network has increased its revenue from $1 million to $8 million since 2017, and added 25 employees. The Community Security Service, a group that trains Jewish volunteers to guard synagogues and Jewish institutions, said its annual budget for this year is double last year’s, at $1 million.

Jewish communities have “invested better than other communities in the security, because they already have the infrastructure,” said Ali Soufan, a former FBI counterterrorism agent and the head of the Soufan Group, an international security firm.

Soufan said that another critical step to protecting Jewish institutions — and efforts the Jewish groups should join in — is to force social media companies to stop hosting extremist groups, as well as dramatically increase the size of federal security grants for religious nonprofits. The Boogaloo movement has incubated on Facebook, where researchers recently found over two-dozen affiliated groups. The ADL is encouraging companies to stop buying ads on Facebook, and several major firms have joined the growing boycott movement, including Verizon, The North Face and Ben & Jerry’s.

Soutan and Rep. Max Rose of New York are also pushing the White House to label white nationalist organizations as foreign terrorist groups, since many of the most violent members have received training overseas. Despite the FBI and the State Department pushing for the same, the White House has yet to respond.

“Our tools are in place, we know what to do,” Rose said. “It’s just a question of whether we are going to treat all forms of terrorism as terrorism.”

Rose, who is Jewish, said that without a significant response from the government and tech companies, right-wing extremist groups are not going away.

“This movement right now looks very similar to what Al-Qaeda looked like in the early- to mid-nineties,” he said. “If that doesn’t scare somebody, I don’t know what does.”

Ari Feldman is a staff writer at the Forward. He covers Jewish religious organizations, synagogue life, anti-Semitism and the Orthodox world. If you have any tips, you can email him at feldman@forward.com. Follow him on Twitter @aefeldman.


https://forward.com/news/national/449660/white-supremacist-extremist-pandemic-jewish-soros/