The Guardian (USA)

California police release on bail man suspected of threatenin­g to shoot a synagogue

- Guardian staff and agencies

California police arrested a man suspected of making online threats to shoot up a Jewish temple, saying he had a fascinatio­n with Adolf Hitler and planned to emulate mass shootings at synagogues in Pittsburgh and San Diego.

Ross Farca, a 23-year-old from Concord, California, was charged with making criminal threats, possessing an illegal assault rifle and manufactur­ing an assault rifle, all felonies. Then, over the weekend, police said, Farca was freed on a $125,000 bond.

The California case is likely to renew questions about whether US law enforcemen­t officials are underestim­ating the threat posed by white supremacis­t terrorists. In May, a judge’s order to release Christophe­r Hasson, a Coast Guard lieutenant that prosecutor­s said had been plotting a neoNazi domestic terror attack, prompted condemnati­on from members of Congress, some of whom had been mentioned on what prosecutor­s described as a hitlist of journalist­s and Democratic politician­s.

In 2017, a ProPublica investigat­ion found, police in Florida released a suspected member of the Atomwaffen Division, a violent neo-Nazi group that has conducted weapons trainings and openly discussed starting a race war, even after finding explosives in his garage. The man, Brandon Russell, had told law enforcemen­t officials that he was using the explosives to power model rockets.

Hours after he was released, ProPublica reported, Russell acquired two rifles, loaded body armor and 1,000 rounds of ammunition into his car, and drove off. Sheriff’s deputies who later stopped the car were “convinced that we had just stopped a mass shooting”, one deputy later told ProPublica.

The California case involving Ross Farca, 23, comes in the wake of a series of high-profile terrorist attacks targeting worshipper­s in Jewish synagogues in the United States and at two Muslim mosques in Christchur­ch, New Zealand.

Police have been tight-lipped about the case, announcing on Friday that Farca was arrested on 10 June and held in the Contra Costa county jail.

During a search of Farca’s house in California, police had recovered uncovered empty high-capacity magazines, camouflage clothing, a sword and Nazi literature. Farca pleaded not guilty to all charges at an arraignmen­t last week, according to the East Bay Times.

The newspaper and other media said Farca had posted online to the video game platform Steam that he

wanted to mimic the gunman in the San Diego incident, “except with a Nazi uniform on”, and aimed for a body count of “at least 30”, using antisemiti­c slurs throughout.

In the San Diego incident in April, a gunman walked into the Chabad of Poway crowded with sabbath worshipper­s, and opened fire with an assault-style rifle, killing one woman and wounding three people.

The San Diego shooting followed two major white supremacis­t attacks: the Christchur­ch attacks in March, which left 50 people dead, and an attack on the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvan­ia, last October, which killed 11 people.

Farca also allegedly talked about how it would be cool to livestream the massacre while playing “Nazi music”, the East Bay Times reported. The New Zealand mosque shooter live streamed himself preparing for the attack and then shooting men, women and children. The footage was widely shared across social media platforms.

Police said they did not find any ammunition during a search last week of Farca’s home. The FBI is also investigat­ing the case, Concord police said in statement on Facebook.

It was unclear early on Monday if Farca was represente­d by an attorney. His next court date is 25 June.

 ??  ?? Police tape surrounds the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh after a shooting there left 11 dead in October. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images
Police tape surrounds the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh after a shooting there left 11 dead in October. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

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