Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Slain man didn’t share pals’ neo-Nazi views, sister says

- By Jason Dearen Associated Press

The sister of a man fatally shot by his roommate said Wednesday that she believed her brother was staying with his friend — who federal investigat­ors said was an avowed neoNazi — because he needed an inexpensiv­e place to sleep in Florida while looking for work, not because he shared his views.

Alyssa Himmelman is the sister of Jeremy Himmelman, 22, whose body was found alongside Andrew Oneschuk, 18, on Friday in a Tampa apartment.

Devon Arthurs, 18, confessed to the slayings. Investigat­ors said he claimed the two victims were neoNazis who had disparaged his newfound Islamic faith. Arthurs told police he had once shared their racist views before converting to Islam. He faces two charges of first-degree murder, along with other charges.

Also arrested was fourth roommate, Brandon Russell, after bomb-making materials were found in the apartment. Russell, a Florida National Guard member, told authoritie­s he was a neo-Nazi who started a group called Atomwaffen, according to a federal complaint. He is being charged in federal court with explosives-related crimes.

Russell had just returned from guard duty when he found Himmelman’s and Oneschuk’s bodies, according to court documents. Police found him in full military dress, crying.

Alyssa Himmelman said her brother was friends with Russell and Arthurs, but she described Arthurs as acting “sick and twisted” when she met him previously.

“He was an odd character,” she said in a telephone interview, describing the time she met Arthurs when he visited her brother in Massachuse­tts before he moved to Florida. “Hewas very loud and racist. He said vulgar things.”

Arthurs told investigat­ors that he also shot Himmelman and Oneschuk to prevent a planned act of domestic terrorism, according to court documents.

But Alyssa Himmelman says her brother was only living there to try and get on his feet, and didn’t subscribe to the beliefs Arthurs is claiming her brother held. She saidRussel­l, 21, kept a framed photograph of Oklahoma City bomber TimothyMcV­eigh on his dresser in a locked bedroom, and who had the military training and bomb-making knowledge he’d picked up in college.

Shesaid her brotherwas naive and did not believe Russell and Arthurs were capable of the killing or bombing the two allegedly plotted. She said Jeremy had planned tocomehome soon, and that he’d fallen out with Russell and Arthurs before.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States