Los Angeles Times

Newsom target of plot, FBI says

A Napa man arrested this month with illegal guns and bombs may have been planning an attack.

- By Phil Willon and Anita Chabria

SACRAMENTO — A suspected far-right extremist and radicalize­d supporter of former President Trump facing federal explosives charges appeared to have been targeting California Gov. Gavin Newsom and the San Francisco Bay Area headquarte­rs of social media giants Twitter and Facebook, according to the FBI.

Federal prosecutor­s charged Ian Benjamin Rogers, 43, of Napa, with possessing five homemade pipe bombs that investigat­ors found when they searched his home and auto repair business Jan. 15. They also confiscate­d additional bomb-making material along with 49 firearms and thousands of rounds of ammunition.

According to an FBI affidavit, Rogers made multiple threats in text messages to attack Democratic targets and ensure that Trump stayed in office.

In the texts, Rogers stated, “Let’s see what happens then we act” and later added, “I’m thinking sac office first target” and “Then maybe bird and face offices.”

FBI Special Agent Stephanie Minor, who is part of the agency’s domestic terrorism squad in San Francisco, said the texts were indication­s of his targets.

“I believe that when Rogers said, ‘sac office first target,’ he meant that their first target should be the offices of California Governor Gavin Newsom in Sacramento. I further believe that when Rogers said that the ‘bird and face’ offices would be next, he meant the offices of Twitter (‘bird’) and Facebook (‘face’), because both social media platforms had locked Trump’s accounts to prevent him from sending messages on those platforms,” according to the affidavit, which was released by David L. Anderson, the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California.

Rogers also stated in a text that he was “not going down without a fight,” according to the federal criminal complaint.

His arrest came less than two weeks after a deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 led by far-right extremists and Trump supporters holding the belief that the November election had been fraudulent, a falsehood promoted by Trump for months.

Authoritie­s in Sacramento have increased security at the Capitol and the governor’s home for weeks after the contentiou­s presidenti­al election and violence in Washington. Thousands of National Guard troops were stationed in Sacramento, and access to the Capitol was limited by barricades. For weeks since the election, pro-Trump supporters have rallied in the city.

A spokeswoma­n for Newsom confirmed that the governor was made aware of the allegation­s and is cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion.

“The informatio­n contained in the federal criminal complaint regarding Ian Rogers is an all too real reminder of the frightenin­g consequenc­es dangerous political rhetoric can have especially in emboldenin­g violent extremism,” Sahar Robertson said in a statement released Wednesday.

Henry Wofford, Napa County Sheriff’s Office spokesman, said his agency began investigat­ing Rogers after a person close to him reported that he had weapons and “was potentiall­y dangerous to the community.” Wofford said deputies served search warrants at Rogers’ home and business, finding weapons at both.

Inside a safe at Rogers’ auto shop, five pipe bombs were found, Wofford said. In all, authoritie­s seized 49 guns and 15,000 rounds of ammunition. Wofford said many of those guns are probably illegal in California, including a “very high power machine gun.”

The federal charges against Rogers were filed Tuesday.

Napa County Dist. Atty. Allison Haley said Rogers also faces 28 felony charges in state court for possession of explosives and weapons.

Haley said the pipe bombs were made out of galvanized steel, had both end caps and fuses, could kill people in a 5-foot range and injure those in a 25-foot range.

In addition to the weapons, investigat­ors also found what Haley described as a “go-bag,” which contained weapons, ammunition, body armor, face masks and a grappling hook. Rogers is scheduled for an arraignmen­t on the state charges Jan. 29. If convicted, he faces 30 years in prison.

Both Haley and the FBI said that Rogers had a sticker on the bumper of his car with an insignia associated with the Three Percenters. Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino, described the group as a national organizati­on of “2nd amendment insurrecti­onists” whose members “maintain when the government acts tyrannical, they have a subjective right to armed rebellion.”

Three Percenters have also been linked to a violent plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

Much of the anger of right-wing anti-government militias has been aimed at governors because of pandemic shutdown orders that they say infringe on their rights and represent an illegal oversteppi­ng of power, beliefs that have spread in online forums. At protests against pandemic-related closures across California, some demonstrat­ors have described Newsom as a fascist for implementi­ng those restrictio­ns, and have regularly displayed an image of the governor as Adolf Hitler, with a tagline that reads, “end his tyranny.”

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