Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kidnapped couple as group initiation, pair admit in pleas

- LINDA SATTER

Two people charged in a racketeeri­ng conspiracy that involves a methamphet­amine traffickin­g ring in the Russellvil­le area and an Arkansas-based white supremacis­t group pleaded guilty Thursday in a Little Rock federal courtroom to violent crimes committed as part of the conspiracy.

Adam F. Mitchell, also known as “Pork Chop,” and Amanda Rapp both pleaded guilty in separate hearings to two counts of kidnapping in aid of racketeeri­ng.

Mitchell and Rapp admitted being part of a group that kidnapped two people identified only by initials — K.D. and C.L. — between June 4 and June 6 of 2014. They admitted the crimes were carried out for the purpose of gaining entrance to, or maintainin­g or increasing their positions in, the New Aryan Empire, the white supremacis­t group.

Mitchell also pleaded guilty to two other charges: assault with a dangerous weapon in aid of racketeeri­ng and maiming in aid of racketeeri­ng. The assault charge alleges that during the same time period, he and six other named defendants and “others known and unknown to the grand jury” assaulted someone identified only as H.D. with a knife and a bat, while the maiming charge states that the group maimed H.D. with a hot knife, causing permanent disfigurem­ent.

Like the kidnapping charges, the assault and maiming charges accuse the defendants of being motivated by gaining entrance into, or maintainin­g or increasing their positions in, the Empire.

Mitchell and Rapp were facing a jury trial involving multiple defendants and a variety of charges that stemmed from a local and federal investigat­ion that began in 2016 to identify, infiltrate and dismantle drug traffickin­g organizati­ons in Russellvil­le. Prosecutor­s

vhave said the investigat­ion revealed that a methamphet­amine ring involved members of the Empire, which began as a prison gang.

On Oct. 3, 2017, 44 people from the Pope County area were indicted on drug and gun charges. Then a supersedin­g indictment handed up on Feb. 5, 2019, added 11 defendants, including Mitchell and Rapp, as well as charges of attempted murder, kidnapping and maiming against some defendants.

About half of the defendants have pleaded guilty, and some of them have been sentenced, while the rest await trial. The complexity of the case prompted U.S. District Judge Brian Miller to appoint a special master to help manage it.

In court Thursday afternoon, Miller told Rapp, 39, that ordinarily he would ask federal prosecutor­s to read aloud a synopsis of what they

thought they could prove at trial against the person pleading guilty. But he said the complexity of the case has led prosecutor­s to submit a written seven-page statement of facts detailing allegation­s that wouldn’t be read aloud and would be filed under seal.

Details of the crimes to which Mitchell and Rapp pleaded guilty also weren’t described in their written plea agreements, which were publicly filed.

In announcing the indictment of 55 of the Aryan Nation’s roughly 5,000 members in February of 2013, authoritie­s said the investigat­ion, dubbed To The Dirt, began in 2016 when federal authoritie­s assisted the Pope County sheriff’s office in a murder case involving the supremacis­t group that began as a prison gang in 1990 and later expanded into neighborin­g communitie­s and states.

Officials said an inmate at the Pope County jail in Russellvil­le founded the Empire, which was described as a “violent and highly structured

criminal enterprise” associated with other white supremacis­t groups such as the Aryan Brotherhoo­d.

The term “To The Dirt” refers to the Empire’s slogan referring to a rule that members must remain in the group until they die, according to U.S. Attorney Cody Hiland.

Authoritie­s allege that between May 2014 and May 2016, New Aryan associates Marcus Millsap, 52, of Danville and James Oliver, 48, of Russellvil­le, along with the group’s president, Wesley Gullett, 30, of Russellvil­le, solicited several members and associates to murder a

confidenti­al informant.

The grand jury found that in January 2016, two New Aryan members unsuccessf­ully attempted to kill the informant.

The grand jury found that between May 28, 2017, and June 6, 2017, members and associates kidnapped, stabbed and maimed two people in retaliatio­n for giving informatio­n to law enforcemen­t authoritie­s about another member. The kidnapping victims were forced to write letters of apology to the New Aryan Empire member and his girlfriend, the indictment said.

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