The Day

Army soldier charged in plot to ambush unit

- By LARRY NEUMEISTER

New York — The new top federal prosecutor in Manhattan on Monday announced her first case since the weekend’s upheaval: the arrest of a U.S. Army soldier charged with plotting a deadly ambush of his unit in Turkey by extremists.

In a release, acting U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss called Private Ethan Melzer, 22, of Louisville, Ky., “the enemy within.”

His lawyers declined comment.

Strauss said he plotted to let members of an extremist group descend on his unit by providing details about its location and security arrangemen­ts.

She identified the group he tried to work with as the Order of the Nine Angles, also known as O9A, described in the release as an occult-based neo-Nazi and racially motivated violent extremist group. Court papers also said he researched terrorist groups, including the Islamic State.

“Melzer was motivated by racism and hatred as he attempted to carry out this ultimate act of betrayal,” Strauss said.

William F. Sweeney Jr., head of the FBI’s New York office, said, “Melzer declared himself to be a traitor against the United States, and described his own conduct as tantamount to treason. We agree.”

Meltzer, who enlisted in the Army in December 2018 and allegedly reached out to the extremist group in 2019, was arrested June 10. He faces charges including trying to support terrorists and conspiring to murder military members. If convicted, he could face life in prison.

A criminal complaint in

Manhattan federal court said Melzer used the internet to communicat­e his unit’s size, anticipate­d travel routes in Turkey, weaponry and defensive capabiliti­es to someone he believed was working with the extremist group to carry out a mass casualty attack.

The complaint said that during a May 30 interview, Melzer confessed to his role in plotting the attack, admitting he planned for it to cause the deaths of as many of his fellow service members as possible.

The complaint said he also declared himself to be a traitor against the United States whose conduct was tantamount to treason.

The complaint said Melzer wrote online at one point: “(y) ou just gotta understand that currently I am risking my literal free life to give you all this” and ‘expecting results.’”

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