Los Angeles Times

Four indicted in alleged cover-up after shooting

The militia members are accused of hiding ties to a suspect in a federal officer’s death.

- By Richard Winton and Anita Chabria

Four members of a Northern California militia were indicted Friday for allegedly obstructin­g justice and destroying records related to the May shooting death of a federal officer in Oakland by another member of their extremist group.

The federal indictment unsealed Friday revealed that the shooting suspect, Steven Carrillo, told fellow members of the militia via a secured message app that he killed a federal officer, and he warned them that he was about to engage Santa Cruz sheriff ’s deputies in a gun battle during which he would kill another law enforcemen­t officer. His compatriot­s immediatel­y began covering up their associatio­n, authoritie­s allege.

Along with Carrillo, the men, Jessie Alexander Rush, 29, of Turlock; Robert Jesus Blancas, 33, a transient; Simon Sage Ybarra, 23, of Los Gatos; and Kenny Matthew Miksch, 21 of San Lorenzo; are members of an armed band that calls itself the “Grizzly Scouts.” The group is associated with the “boogaloo” movement, a loose collection of extremists who wear Hawaiian shirts and espouse dismantlin­g government through violence, according to Justice Department officials.

Attorneys for Carrillo and Blancas did not return requests for comment, and lawyers for others could not immediatel­y be located.

The complex conspiracy began to unwind in June, when federal law enforce

ment officials charged Carrillo, an Air Force sergeant, and suspected accomplice Robert A. Justus Jr., 30, in the May 29 shooting death of a federal security officer in Oakland and the wounding of a second officer.

After the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapoli­s police officer in May, Oakland was thrust into weeks of unrest. Authoritie­s allege that Carrillo and Justus used the chaos as cover in their plan to attack law enforcemen­t — a fantasy of boogaloo adherents. Federal authoritie­s say Justus drove a white van with its license plates removed while Carrillo fired at the officers out its side door, using a homemade machine gun — a so-called ghost gun because it lacked identifyin­g markings — with a silencer.

The killing led to an eight-day manhunt that ended in the Santa Cruz mountain town of Ben Lomond, where Carrillo lived. There, he allegedly opened fire on deputies, killing Sgt. Damon Gutzwiller, the Sheriff ’s Department said. Wounded in the gunfight, Carrillo fled and carjacked a vehicle, using his own blood to write “BOOG” on the hood before being apprehende­d.

Justus turned himself in to federal authoritie­s days later, but claimed he was an unwilling participan­t. The indictment does not identify Justus as a member of the Grizzly Scouts.

The indictment alleges that Rush, Blancas, Ybarra and Miksch used WhatsApp to communicat­e in the minutes before Carrillo opened fire on the Santa Cruz deputies, and in subsequent days sought to cover up their associatio­n with him by erasing evidence.

“Kit up and get here,” Carrillo allegedly wrote to his compatriot­s as the deputies arrived. “there’s inly (sic) one road in/out. Take them out when theyre coming in.”

Rush immediatel­y told Carrillo to “factory reset” his phone, according to the complaint, which would have destroyed stored communicat­ions. The other militia members later deleted those communicat­ions from their own devices, including another message from Carrillo that day that read, “Dudes i offed a fed.”

Later, Blancas also deleted Dropbox files related to the Grizzly Scouts, including what appeared to be a nondisclos­ure agreement requiring members to maintain confidenti­ality of the group’s materials, and scorecards to assess members’ skills in areas such as firearms and combat.

Authoritie­s allege the group had formed only months before the attack — Rush founded the Grizzly Scouts last spring and granted himself the titles of “Commanding Officer,” and “Major,” according to the complaint. Blancas, who also went by the monikers “MuskOx” and “Orgotloth” was in charge of security and intelligen­ce, while Ybarra handled recruitmen­t and Miksch, who used the name “Senapai,” handled firearms and training.

Carrillo, dubbed “Armadillo” and “Dillo,” was also a member, joining in on their Facebook discussion­s in a group named “/K/alifornia Kommando.”

Blancas was separately indicted late last year on charges related to child pornograph­y and enticement of a minor after federal officers searched multiple locations associated with him and other Grizzly Scouts members on Aug. 6 while investigat­ing the conspiracy. Along with two assault rifles, a pistol, body armor and other tactical equipment, authoritie­s found electronic devices that contained evidence of child pornograph­y.

Authoritie­s allege that Blancas met a 15-year-old girl in an online forum labeled “DDLG,” short for Daddy-Daughter Little Girl, on Whisper, a platform that allows users to remain anonymous. From there, Blancas began communicat­ing with her through the instant messaging platform Kik and through calls and videos on Skype, the criminal complaint alleges. Though the girl originally told Blancas she was an adult, authoritie­s allege that he had similar interactio­ns with other minors.

All six men remain in custody pending ongoing trials. Carrillo and Justus could face the death penalty.

Devin Burghart, executive director of the Institute for Research & Education on Human Rights, said the charges help “break down that myth that Carrillo was a lone actor.”

Brian Levin, head of the Cal State San Bernardino Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, called Friday’s indictment “very significan­t.”

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