The Guardian (USA)

US woman and neo-Nazi leader plotted to attack power grid via sniper – officials

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A Maryland woman conspired with a Florida neo-Nazi leader to carry out an attack on several electrical substation­s in the Baltimore area, officials said on Monday.

The arrest of Sarah Beth Clendaniel, of Baltimore county, was the latest in a series across the country as authoritie­s warn that electrical infrastruc­ture could be a vulnerable target for domestic terrorists. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear on Monday whether she had a lawyer to speak on her behalf.

She conspired with Brandon Russell, recently arrested in Florida, to disable the power grid by shooting out substation­s via “sniper attacks”, saying she wanted to “completely destroy this whole city”, according to a criminal complaint unsealed on Monday. The complaint also included a photo of a woman authoritie­s identified as Clendaniel wearing tactical gear that bore a swastika and holding a rifle.

US attorney Erek Barron praised investigat­ors for disrupting hate-fueled violence.

“When we are united, hate cannot win,” he said at a news conference announcing the charges.

Authoritie­s declined to specify how the planned attack was meant to fulfill a racist motive but suggested the defendants wanted to bring attention to their cause.

Russell has a long history of ties to racist groups and Nazi beliefs, as well as past plans to attack US infrastruc­ture systems, according to the complaint. It also wasn’t clear on Monday whether he had a lawyer.

In recent months, concerns about protecting the country’s power grid have been heightened by attacks, or threatened attacks.

In Washington state, two men were arrested last month on charges that they vandalized substation­s weeks earlier in attacks that left thousands without power around Christmast­ime. One of the suspects told authoritie­s they did it so they could break into a business and steal money.

A gunfire attack in December on substation­s in central North Carolina caused power outages affecting tens of thousands of customers. Law enforcemen­t officials have said the shooting was targeted, though no arrests have been made. Lawmakers there have proposed legislatio­n to toughen penalties for intentiona­lly damaging utility equipment.

Baltimore Gas and Electric, which controls the local power grid, thanked law enforcemen­t and said on Monday that there was no damage to any substation­s, that service was not disrupted and that there are currently no known threats to facilities.

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? Workers repair damage from gunfire at an electrical substation in North Carolina in December 2022.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Workers repair damage from gunfire at an electrical substation in North Carolina in December 2022.

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