The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Police: 3 men held in plot to start race war

White supremacis­ts planned to kill Bartow couple, officials say.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com and Chris Joyner cjoyner@ajc.com

Authoritie­s in North Georgia said they have arrested three men who belong to a white supremacis­t organizati­on that was plotting to kill a Bartow County couple, overthrow the government and start a race war.

Floyd County police allege the three are members of “the Base,” described as a violent organizati­on that has a substantia­l presence south of Rome in the rural Silver Creek community. The group’s goal, police said, is to “establish a white ethno-state.”

The men — Michael John Helterbran­d, 25, of Dalton; Jacob Kaderli, 19, of Dacula; and Luke Austin Lane, 21, of Silver Creek — plotted in North Georgia last year with a fourth member of the same group, a Canadian national named Patrick Jordan Mathews, according to Floyd police.

Federal law enforcemen­t authoritie­s arrested Mathews, a former combat engineer in the Canadian Army Reserve, and two other Base members in Maryland and charged them with firearm-related offenses this week. Mathews had discussed partic-

ipating in a pro-gun rally Monday in Richmond, Va., where state lawmakers are considerin­g gun control measures, The New York Times reported. Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam instituted a temporary ban on firearms on Capitol grounds ahead of the rally, citing intelligen­ce that extremist groups were threatenin­g violence. A Virginia Circuit Court judge upheld the order in a ruling Thursday.

The rally has drawn support from far-right groups, including the Georgia III% Security Force militia, led by Chris Hill, an Atlanta-area resident. Hill, who has spent months publicizin­g the rally on his social media channels, apparently is in Richmond for the event. On Friday, Hill posted a news account of the Base arrests on Facebook, saying: “FBI Just Arrested 3 Men That Were Headed to The Virginia Rally” and called the accusation­s “fake.”

The three Georgians have each been charged with participat­ing in a criminal gang and conspiracy to commit murder. Jail records do not identify any attorneys representi­ng them.

“The group was involved in recruiting new members online, meeting to discuss strategy and practicing in paramilita­ry training camps on a 100-acre tract in Silver Creek,” Floyd police said in a news release.

The case is detailed in a 20-page affidavit Floyd police released Friday. It describes how an undercover FBI agent infiltrate­d the group last year. He met with some of its members on the Lane family’s sprawling property in Silver Creek and participat­ed in shooting drills to prepare for what the group calls the “Boogaloo,” or the collapse of the United States and a race war.

Lane is identified in the affidavit as using the online alias “TMB.” Archived records show TMB was a regular poster on neo-Nazi forums. On one, he described his journey from libertaria­n-leaning Republican to radical neo-Nazi.

“I was always (National Socialist) but never knew it, so that is probably why I skipped around in fringeyish circles looking for the truth I knew existed somewhere,” he wrote.

In another meeting attended by the undercover agent, Mathews — who “crossed into the United States illegally — was there, the affidavit said. Later, the agent observed Helterbran­d, Kaderli and Lane discuss plans to kill an unnamed, married Bartow couple who they believed belong to the Atlanta Antifascis­ts. The agent accompanie­d Kaderli and Lane as they surveilled the couple’s home and surroundin­g neighborho­od.

Atlanta Antifascis­ts, an anonymous group that researches and exposes white supremacis­ts online, released a statement to the The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that said the couple was not a member of its group. But the group said such plots are not unexpected.

“Targeting people as members of our group has become a favorite pastime of violent white supremacis­ts,” the statement said, adding the Base is trying “to create a general attitude of terror and paranoia.”

A neo-Nazi group that has been active online since it emerged in 2018, the Base portrays its members as “soldiers defending the European race against a system that is infected by Jewish values,” said Oren Segal, vice president of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism.

“This is a continuati­on of the threat of domestic terrorism that I think people are really wrapping their heads around finally,” Segal said. “To some degree, we have seen law enforcemen­t talk about sort of doubling down on efforts to track this deadly threat. And maybe now we are starting to see some of the outcomes of that focus.”

 ??  ?? Luke Austin Lane
Luke Austin Lane
 ??  ?? Jacob Kaderli
Jacob Kaderli
 ??  ?? Michael Helterbran­d
Michael Helterbran­d

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