The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

North Georgia man under investigat­ion

27-year-old allegedly exposed to ricin, has white supremacis­t ties.

- By Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com

Investigat­ors are not saying why a Fannin County man with white supremacis­t ties allegedly produced ricin and what he intended to do with the deadly toxin.

William Christophe­r Gibbs, 27, was arrested last Thursday after he drove himself to a local hospital and said he’d been exposed to ricin, a poison derived from castor beans that can be lethal in doses equivalent to a few grains of salt.

Fannin Sheriff Dane Kirby initially told reporters Gibbs’ car had tested positive for “a small amount” of ricin, but the suspect, being held by local authoritie­s on reckless conduct and violation of probation charges, apparently suffered no ill effects.

His mother, Tammy Gibbs, told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on she visited her son in jail on Saturday and he appeared fine.

“The FBI is telling me nothing,” she said Thursday.

In a statement, U.S. Attorney John Horn confirmed that federal agents are investigat­ing, but said there is “no evidence that any poisonous or toxic substances have been dispersed or that the public is at risk.” But was a potential risk averted? “It would take a deliberate act to make ricin and use it to poison

people,” according to The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In other words, if Gibbs was exposed it was no accident.

His connection to a white supremacis­t group only heightens concerns.

Gibbs, according to his Facebook profile, belongs to the Georgia Church Of Creativity and identifies as a “White Racial Loyalist.” According to the Anti-Defamation League, the Creativity Movement is a “hardcore white supremacis­t group that dates back to the 1970s, notable for its attempt to assume the guise of a religion as a way to promote its racist and anti-Semitic views.”

Its founder, Matt Hale, was sentenced in 2004 to 40 years in prison for soliciting the murder of a federal judge, the ADL said. That led the movement to splinter, with groups such as the Creativity Alliance, which Gibbs also lists in his Facebook profile, emerging as a successor.

Ricin, according to the ADL, is popular with rightwing extremists who view the toxin as a “poor man’s anthrax.” In 2014, four elderly North Georgia men were convicted of plotting to make ricin so they could kill Atlanta-based federal agents and judges. Two of them pleaded guilty, and a jury in federal court in Gainesvill­e convicted the other two members and sentenced them to 10 years in prison.

Tammy Gibbs acknowledg­ed that her son — who worked until recently as a forklift operator at Pilgrim’s Pride, a poultry processor — was involved with white supremacis­ts, but said she doesn’t believe he intended to harm anyone. He has been in and out of trouble since he was a teenager, she said, mostly for “general stupidity. Nothing violent.”

“He’s trying to find a place where he belongs,” Tammy Gibbs said. Her son, who goes by his middle name, Chris, has always felt like an outcast, she said.

According to the Fannin sheriff’s incident report, Tammy Gibbs told police her son suffers from bipolar disorder and schizophre­nia.

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