Baltimore Sun Sunday

Militia accused of plot to bomb Kansas Somalis

- By Eric Tucker and Roxana Hegeman

WICHITA, Kan. — Three members of a Kansas militia group are accused of plotting to bomb an apartment complex that’s home to Somali immigrants in the western Kansas meatpackin­g town of Garden City, a thwarted attack prosecutor­s say was planned for the day after the November election.

A complaint unsealed Friday charges Curtis Wayne Allen, 49; Patrick Eugene Stein, 47; and Gavin Wayne Wright, 49, with conspiring to use a weapon of mass destructio­n. The men are members of a small militia group that calls itself “the Crusaders,” and whose members espouse sovereign citizen, anti-government, anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant extremist beliefs, according to the complaint.

Prosecutor­s said the men don’t yet have attorneys. Their first court appearance is Monday.

The arrests were the culminatio­n of an eight-month FBI investigat­ion “deep into a hidden culture of hatred and violence,” Acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall said.

The complaint alleges group members chose the target based on their hatred of Muslims, people of Somali descent and immigrants — and out of a desire to inspire other militia groups and “wake people up.”

The FBI began a domestic terrorism investigat­ion of the group in February, and a confidenti­al source attended its meetings in southweste­rn Kansas.

In a June meeting, Stein brought up the Orlando nightclub shooting and proposed carrying out a similar attack against Muslim refugees in Garden City, according to the complaint. They ultimately decided to target the apartment complex because of the number of Somalis who lived there and the fact that one of the apartments was used as a mosque. The complex houses about 120 Somali residents, Beall said.

In a profanity-laced conference call that law enforcemen­t monitored, Stein said the only way “this country’s ever going to get turned around is it will be a bloodbath,” according to the complaint.

If convicted, the men could be sentenced to up to life in federal prison without parole.

Heidi Beirich, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligen­ce Project, called the details of the plot disturbing, saying it “should serve as a warning to those who traffic in the politics of fear and bigotry.”

Dr. John Birky, who’s helping to create a clinic and working with refugees on a language program, said some local residents fear the refugees, mistakenly associatin­g them with militants in Somalia.

“People do express more of a general sentiment of, W` hy are we letting these refugees in here? Why are we? They’re taking our jobs, plus they’re Muslim,’ ” he said.

Birky said between 300 and 500 Somali refugees live in the area. The state Department for Children and Families said that of the 906 refugees who arrived in Kansas from October 2014 through January 2016, 68 were from Somalia, or 7.5 percent.

Birky said most are fleeing militants in Somalia and want to assimilate once they reach Kansas.

“They’re trying to make a better life for their families here,” he said.

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