Chattanooga Times Free Press

More men are charged in farm animal killing at white supremacis­t camp

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ROME, Ga. — The killing of a farm animal during what authoritie­s have said was a “ritual sacrifice” during a training camp in Georgia for a white supremacis­t group has led to charges against five additional men.

Patrik Mathews, William Garfield Bilbrough IV, Brian Mark Lemley Jr., Brandon Gregory Ashley and Duncan Christophe­r Trimmell were charged last week with aggravated animal cruelty and all but Trimmell were also charged with livestock theft by a Floyd County grand jury, according to an indictment first reported by the Rome News-Tribune. It was not immediatel­y clear Friday whether any of them had a lawyer who could comment on the charges.

Mathews, Lemley and Bilbrough were also arrested in Maryland and Delaware on federal felony charges in January 2020.

Floyd County prosecutor­s identified the animal, which they say was beheaded during a meeting of the group in October 2019, as a ram. Federal prosecutor­s have said it was a goat. They’ve said the men stole the animal and attempted unsuccessf­ully to kill it with a knife and then ended up shooting it to death and cutting off its head.

The killing happened at a training camp in north Georgia that prosecutor­s have said was organized by The Base, a white supremacis­t group that espoused using violence to accelerate overthrowi­ng the U.S. government.

Three other men, all from north Georgia and linked by authoritie­s to The Base, already face charges related to the animal’s death and other alleged crimes. Luke Austin Lane, Michael Helterbran­d and Jacob Kaderli have been held without bond for more than a year in the Floyd County jail, the NewsTribun­e reported.

The arrests of the Georgia men were announced in January 2020, a day after Mathews, Lemley and Bilbrough were arrested.

A federal judge in December sentenced Bilbrough, of Denton, Maryland, to five years in prison after he pleaded guilty to two counts related to assisting Mathews. Lemley, a U.S. Army veteran from Elkton, Maryland, and Mathews, a former Canadian Armed Forces reservist, have pleaded not guilty to charges including transporti­ng a firearm and ammunition with the intent to commit a felony.

Ashley, of Hayden, Alabama, and Trimmell, of Austin, Texas, weren’t charged in federal court with the other three.

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