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

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Men charged with gun crimes had neo-Nazi ties, trained in Idaho, targeted Boise BLM

Federal prosecutors in North Carolina allege that before three Idaho men conspired to ship illegally altered guns across state lines, they conspired online on a white supremacist, neo-Nazi forum and later recorded a propaganda video during live-fire gun training outside of Boise.


Three men who moved to the Boise area in the past year — 21-year-old Liam Collins, 35-year-old Paul Kryscuk and 25-year-old Jordan Duncan — were charged with various gun crimes in October.


In a superseding indictment, a North Carolina grand jury indicted Collins and Kryscuk on additional charges relating to the transportation of firearms without a license. Prosecutors say Collins and Duncan are former Marines who were previously assigned to Camp Lejeune in Jacksonville, North Carolina.


Authorities allege that Collins sent $1,500 to Kryscuk to buy a 9-mm handgun and suppressor, and in return, Kryscuk bought necessary items from other vendors to manufacture the firearms and suppressors, according to a news release sent Friday from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Eastern District of North Carolina.


Suppressors are highly regulated attachments meant to muffle the sound of a gun when it’s fired. Buying a suppressor legally requires a lengthy screening process that can take more than a year.

Kryscuk allegedly shipped the guns from Idaho to North Carolina for another defendant, Justin Wade Hermanson, a member of the same Marine unit where Collins was last assigned. Authorities allege that Hermanson communicated to other Marines there about the illegal gun sales, and that Kryscuk was building fully automatic rifles.


Federal court documents outline how the group was years in the making, and started through posts on a neo-Nazi forum that was the focus of a military investigation in 2019.


Starting as early as 2016, Collins allegedly began posting on a now-defunct neo-Nazi web forum called Iron March. In addition to the gun crimes, prosecutors allege that he began recruiting members for a group he described as “a modern day SS” in the United States. The SS was a cold-blooded paramilitary group for the Nazi Party.


Collins spoke with Kryscuk over the site about the potential group, writing about the need for “laying the framework for a guerilla organization and a takeover of local government and industry,” according to the superseding indictment. He added that they needed to buy property in remote areas that were “already predominantly white and right leaning, networking with locals, training, farming, and stockpiling.”


In August 2017, Collins reported that he had a group of ex-military members who had joined his cause. In December 2018, Duncan was stationed at Camp Lejeune and was photographed with Collins and Kryscuk.





In January 2019, an unnamed person allegedly paid Kryscuk — who was living in New York at the time — to make him a 9-mm pistol. In May 2019, Kryscuk constructed an assault rifle for the same person, authorities say.


Kryscuk moved to Boise in February 2020, and later told the group about the possibility of converting solvent traps to suppressors. In April, Hermanson allegedly paid Kryscuk for a pistol and suppressor, which Kryscuk made and shipped to North Carolina.


In July, Kryscuk, Duncan — who was living at an Air Force base in San Antonio, Texas, at the time — and two others met in Boise for live-fire weapons training outside of the city. Duncan drove to Idaho and was seen unloading heavy boxes at Kryscuk’s home, according to federal officials.


During the training, prosecutors say the group made a video while shooting short barrel rifles and assault-style rifles. At the end of the video, the four are seen giving a “Heil Hitler” sign and are wearing skull masks associated with the Atomwaffen Division, a terrorist neo-Nazi organization that is connected to multiple murders in the United States. The last frame of the video featured the phrase “come home white man.”


In July, Kryscuk told Duncan over an Instagram message to “follow BLM (Black Lives Matter) Boise” in order to watch the group on social media. Two days later, Kryscuk was present at a BLM rally at the Boise State University campus, first in his parked vehicle and then driving around the rally for about 20 minutes, according to the indictment.

Kryscuk was nearby for another rally on Aug. 18. The rally was changed last-minute to a park to avoid counterprotesters, and Kryscuk was seen in the area of the park for five or six minutes.


In October, Kryscuk and Duncan discussed shooting protesters in Boise, according to the superseding indictment, and also discussed “the end of democracy.”


Duncan and Collins just moved to Boise in September and October of this year. The two, as well as Kryscuk, were arrested in late October.


If convicted, Kryscuk and Collins face a maximum sentence of up to 20 years in prison on their charges. Hermanson is facing a maximum of 10 years. Duncan could get up to five years if convicted.

 
Recently, multiple DeviantArt accounts were compromised by a group going by "Lawmen of Danail" (context tells me that "Danail" is the leader/founder), and used to post Atomwaffen propaganda. I've been looking into it because I'm bored, but I've sort of hit a wall in my investigation, so I thought I'd ask here. I have some notes with lots of archived links, but since I don't want to shit up a good thread with potentially unrelated content, I'll only post the most relevant ones. I just want to know if there is any relation first:
Do any of you recognize the names "Danail", "Isidor", "Scinia", or "aaaaaaaaaa" (that's 10 lowercase 'A's), or the repeated (albeit generic) phrase "I AM THE LAW", and can confirm any connection (or lack of) to Atomwaffen? They seem to come from a discord server, but beyond that I know little about them.
To me, they seem more like teenage AWD fanboys, or edgelords trying to stir up trouble but with no real connection to the AWD, but I'm just trying to make sure.

Some more info:
The affected accounts were all on DeviantArt, and all associated with "furry" art in one way or another (that's why I'm using a burner account, I'm not about to powerlevel my taste in porn)
It seems to be a followup to a hack about a month prior, where they targeted the account of the creator of "Hazbin Hotel", spamming now-invalid invites to their discord, and weird memes about "Omega Tiger Woods", with no mentions of Atomwaffen.

Links:
Archive of first hack: https://archive.md/UAjz4

Surviving instance of a hacked account (all others were recovered or deleted): https://www.deviantart.com/neko-chan-battosai (Archive: https://archive.md/rcwuY )(All of the posts made by the hackers have been archived too)

Post by artist targetted in second hack (with screenshot of now-deleted posts made by the hacker): https://www.deviantart.com/diives/art/I-got-hacked-862260262 (Archive: https://archive.md/ApSMD )

Thank you in advance for any information, and apologies for shitting up the thread.
 
I'm just going to leave this here
image0.jpg
 
James Mason did a now deleted interview with Patrick Siegeman about the recent passing of Tom Metzger, his thoughts on Tom, personal stories, his ideology, etc. James describes him as a classical "racist democrat" and claims he did every little thing to try push forward Mason's works throughout his life, it's pretty fascinating. It's a bitch to get these cause Siegeman almost always immediately deletes them, enjoy and feel free to repost.





 

Man linked to white supremacist group gets 5 years in prison

COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — A Maryland man was sentenced on Tuesday to five years in prison after pleading guilty to charges stemming from an FBI undercover investigation of a white supremacist group that espoused using violence to accelerate overthrowing the U.S. government.
William Garfield Bilbrough IV was an “unabashed” member of the group, called The Base, and participated in its military-style training camps, a federal prosecutor said. Bilbrough, 20, was one of three men arrested in January ahead of a gun rights rally in Richmond, Virginia.

Prosecutors have said the two other group members, Brian Mark Lemley Jr. and Patrik Mathews, discussed “the planning of violence” at the Richmond rally. Bilbrough participated in early discussions about traveling to Richmond but had tried to distance himself from the group shortly before his arrest, a prosecutor has said.

U.S. District Judge Theodore Chuang told Bilbrough that his punishment is for his actions, not his extremist ideology.
“Regardless of the viewpoints of The Base and its members, the law cannot tolerate the kind of violence that you were facilitating,” Chuang said. “You got yourself off this path before it got too far into violence.”

Bilbrough was charged with conspiring to transport and harbor Mathews, who is accused of illegally entering the U.S. from Canada in 2019. Bilbrough pleaded guilty on Tuesday to two counts related to assisting Mathews, including a conspiracy charge punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

Bilbrough answered a series of routine questions during Tuesday’s hearing but declined to give a statement before Chuang sentenced him. The judge accepted the terms of a plea agreement in which prosecutors and Bilbrough’s attorneys jointly recommended a five-year prison sentence.

Lemley, a U.S. Army veteran from Elkton, Maryland, and Mathews, a former Canadian Armed Forces reservist, have pleaded not guilty to charges including transporting a firearm and ammunition with the intent to commit a felony. Bilbrough was not charged with any firearms-related offenses.

Defense attorney Megan Coleman told the judge that Bilbrough recognizes the “gravity and the severity of his actions.”
“It really is a tragic case from our perspective,” she said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Windom described Bilbrough as the “least culpable” of the three men and vowed to seek longer prison sentences for Lemley and Mathews if they’re convicted.

Mathews fled Canada after a Winnipeg Free Press reporter exposed him as a member of The Base in an August 2019 article. Bilbrough drove with Lemley to Michigan to pick up Mathews, knowing that the Canadian had entered the U.S. “to engage in subversive activity or other serious criminal behavior,” Windom said.

Lemley and Mathews also face separate but related federal charges in Delaware, where they shared a home. A closed-circuit television camera and microphone investigators installed in the home captured Lemley talking about using a thermal imaging scope affixed to his rifle to ambush unsuspecting civilians and police officers, prosecutors said.

“I need to claim my first victim,” Lemley said last December, according to prosecutors.
Mathews talked about the Virginia rally as a “boundless” opportunity, authorities said. Mathews also videotaped himself advocating for killing people, poisoning water supplies and derailing trains, a prosecutor wrote in a court filing.
An FBI undercover employee infiltrated the group, visiting the Delaware home and driving with Mathews and Lemley to a gun range in Maryland in January.
Bilbrough was working as a pizza delivery driver and living with his grandmother in Denton, Maryland, at the time of his arrest.
The case against the three men charged in Maryland are part of a larger investigation of The Base. In January, authorities in Georgia and Wisconsin arrested four other men linked to the group.

Bilbrough participated in several training camps for The Base, including one in Georgia in August 2019, and appeared in a propaganda video for the group, according to prosecutors. They said Bilbrough had compared The Base favorably to al-Qaida and remarked to other Base members that the Islamic State group “doesn’t compare to us.”

“By these statements, Bilbrough was boasting that The Base’s aspirations were greater than either terrorist organization,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing.

During a hearing in January, Windom displayed a photograph recovered from Bilbrough’s phone in which the defendant is holding up the severed head of a goat he killed in a “ritual sacrifice” at a training camp in Georgia for members of The Base. Bilbrough initially tried to kill the goat with a knife but failed, so he borrowed a gun to shoot it, Windom said.

 
Alright so Ive just found this site and read siege couple months back but this is not good in Siege the Satanism was more for values but this Rape guy is insane Europe seems to have legit NS groups what is an American one? It seems like there is absolutely none everything is fucked in USA
lurk moar, glow less
1520559672114.jpg
 
This probably sounds more glowniggerish but what is this site about is it just a wiki of shitheads ?
It's a repository for any sort of exceptional information.

If you go back a couple page's a few members or 'larpers' have already schizo posted about how 'oh you got it all wrong'

That'd be the lolcow wiki.
:smug:
 
If edge-socs were smart they'd name groups shit like "Bernie Sander's chosen," that way glow niggers would think they were a lefty terrorist group and ignore them.
They want to be edgy, not smart. They don’t intend to actually do anything, besides looking tacticool and freaking out normies.
 
The affected accounts were all on DeviantArt, and all associated with "furry" art in one way or another (that's why I'm using a burner account, I'm not about to powerlevel my taste in porn)
It seems to be a followup to a hack about a month prior, where they targeted the account of the creator of "Hazbin Hotel", spamming now-invalid invites to their discord, and weird memes about "Omega Tiger Woods", with no mentions of Atomwaffen.
Sounds like they're just le ebin furry trole masters.
 

Neo-Nazi group member who threatened journalist gets prison

An Arizona man who joined other members of a neo-Nazi group in a coordinated campaign to threaten and harass journalists, activists and other targets on both U.S. coasts was sentenced Wednesday to 16 months in federal prison.

Johnny Roman Garza, 21, expressed remorse before a federal judge in Seattle handed down the sentence, which was roughly half the length of the term recommended by prosecutors and a probation officer.

Garza pleaded guilty in September to conspiring with other members of the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen Division to deliver threatening messages to journalists’ homes and other places in the U.S. On a Jewish journalist’s bedroom window, Garza affixed a poster that depicted a man in a skull mask holding a Molotov cocktail in front of a burning home. The poster included the journalist’s name and home address.


“In Garza’s words, the plot was designed to ‘have them all wake up one morning and find themselves terrorized by targeted propaganda,’” a prosecutor wrote in a court filing.

On the same January day as his visit to the Jewish editor’s home, Garza also stopped by a Phoenix apartment complex where a member of the Arizona Association of Black Journalists lived. But he couldn’t find a place to leave a poster.

Garza said he was “in a time of darkness and isolation” that made it easier for ”rebellious and resentful” influences to take hold of his life.

“Very unfortunately, I fell in with the worst crowd you can probably fall in with, a very self-destructive crowd at the least,” he told U.S. District Judge John Coughenour.

More than a dozen people linked to Atomwaffen or an offshoot called Feuerkrieg Division have been charged with crimes in federal court since the group’s formation in 2016. Atomwaffen has been linked to several killings, including the May 2017 shooting deaths of two men at an apartment in Tampa, Florida, and the January 2018 killing of a University of Pennsylvania student in California.

In Seattle, the judge said he believes Garza is genuinely remorseful. He said he also factored Garza’s youth and “turbulent childhood” into his decision to depart from sentencing guidelines that recommended 33 months.

Coughenour didn’t mention President Donald Trump by name but said it has been troubling to see officials at “the highest levels of our government” refer to journalists as “enemies of the people.”

“Referring to journalism and the press and media as ‘fake news’ enables people who are vulnerable to suggestions like this, very young people ... that this kind of conduct is appropriate,” he said.


Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Woods said many members of the community that Garza targeted have lost faith in the principle, articulated by Martin Luther King Jr., that “the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.”

“How terrifying that must have been,” Woods said. “How exhausting it must feel not to be safe in one’s home.”

Defense attorney Seth Apfel said the case tested him personally “on a lot of levels” because he is Jewish, married to a Black woman and has been a victim of anti-Semitism. But he said Garza has made a “complete and sincere change” in his life.

Garza “not just disavowed the views that he had, but really embraced a new way of being,” Apfel said.

Apfel urged the judge to spare Garza from prison. But Coughenour ruled out a sentence of probation, saying he wanted to avoid possible disparities in the punishment that Garza’s co-defendants could face.

“If I were to give him straight probation, it would make it very difficult to deal with the other persons appropriately,” the judge said.

The court did not immediately set a date for Garza to report to prison.

Garza, of Queen Creek, Arizona, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to mail threatening communications and commit cyberstalking. Taylor Ashley Parker-Dipeppe, of Spring Hill, Florida, pleaded guilty in September to a related charge and is scheduled to be sentenced in February.

Cameron Brandon Shea, of Redmond, Washington, and Kaleb J. Cole, of Montgomery, Texas, also were charged in the Seattle case in February and are scheduled to be tried in March 2021.

Also in February, a man described by authorities as a founding member and former leader of Atomwaffen was arrested in Texas on related charges in Virginia that he participated in a series of hoax bomb threats against targets including a ProPublica journalist and a former Cabinet official. John Cameron Denton, of Montgomery, Texas, faces up to five years in prison after pleading guilty in July to conspiring to transmit threats.

 
Interview between James Mason, Patrick Siegeman and the livechat. The stream was just removed from youtube, but I was able to get the audio(which is all that matters). It's pretty interesting, shows just how badly AW are misusing his book, how out of touch he is with the internet and later on he talks about the incident with the 15yo
View attachment 1486262

2nd half:
View attachment 1486265
where can I find his channel?
 
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Recently, multiple DeviantArt accounts were compromised by a group going by "Lawmen of Danail" (context tells me that "Danail" is the leader/founder), and used to post Atomwaffen propaganda. I've been looking into it because I'm bored, but I've sort of hit a wall in my investigation, so I thought I'd ask here. I have some notes with lots of archived links, but since I don't want to shit up a good thread with potentially unrelated content, I'll only post the most relevant ones. I just want to know if there is any relation first:
Do any of you recognize the names "Danail", "Isidor", "Scinia", or "aaaaaaaaaa" (that's 10 lowercase 'A's), or the repeated (albeit generic) phrase "I AM THE LAW", and can confirm any connection (or lack of) to Atomwaffen? They seem to come from a discord server, but beyond that I know little about them.
To me, they seem more like teenage AWD fanboys, or edgelords trying to stir up trouble but with no real connection to the AWD, but I'm just trying to make sure.

Some more info:
The affected accounts were all on DeviantArt, and all associated with "furry" art in one way or another (that's why I'm using a burner account, I'm not about to powerlevel my taste in porn)
It seems to be a followup to a hack about a month prior, where they targeted the account of the creator of "Hazbin Hotel", spamming now-invalid invites to their discord, and weird memes about "Omega Tiger Woods", with no mentions of Atomwaffen.

Links:
Archive of first hack: https://archive.md/UAjz4

Surviving instance of a hacked account (all others were recovered or deleted): https://www.deviantart.com/neko-chan-battosai (Archive: https://archive.md/rcwuY )(All of the posts made by the hackers have been archived too)

Post by artist targetted in second hack (with screenshot of now-deleted posts made by the hacker): https://www.deviantart.com/diives/art/I-got-hacked-862260262 (Archive: https://archive.md/ApSMD )

Thank you in advance for any information, and apologies for shitting up the thread.
I AM THE LAW is a Judge Dredd reference. It's a lot like 40k in that chan fascists like it in a form of "reverse irony" where they completely reject the anti-authoritarian undertones and suck it off at face value. They'll portray Starship Troopers' film adaptation and the Nazi America setting in Wolfenstein: The New Colussus the same way.
As far as why it's repeated so damn often, it's probably from this video:
 
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Not sure if it belongs here, but this fucking shit.


Regarding the question the links asks, I couldn't help but to remember this sub.
This lady drew that, she's not relevant to this thread but shes engaged to the leader of some Nordist movement. She use to be more of a Tarrant fangirl, she got vanned last year because her parents reported her.
 
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