The Mercury News

21 White supremacis­ts, associates busted

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Federal authoritie­s in Utah have charged 21 White supremacis­t gang members and associates with distributi­ng drugs and firearms around the state, according to a series of indictment­s unsealed Friday.

The charges follow a 16-month investigat­ion into three “homegrown” hate groups — Soldiers of Aryan Culture, Silent Aryan Warriors and Noble Elect Thugs — that officials described as increasing­ly organized criminal enterprise­s.

“Unfortunat­ely, this is a Utah product,” U. S. Attorney John Huber said at a news conference. “There are many things to be proud of in Utah, from our snow, beautiful mountains, national parks. White supremacis­t gangs, it’s one of ours. We own it and we’re not proud of it.”

The suspects are accused of selling methamphet­amine, heroin, painkiller­s, marijuana and other drugs in the Salt Lake City and Ogden areas.

The investigat­ion, led by local and federal authoritie­s, resulted in a slew of felony charges against the group, including distributi­on of methamphet­amine and possession of a firearm by a felon. Nine of the suspects could face up to life in prison if convicted.

Officials said many of the defendants have been involved in criminal conduct in Utah communitie­s for many years. One of the gangs, Soldiers of Aryan Culture, was born in a Utah state prison in the 1990s and has been expanding since, Huber told reporters.

The FBI recently warned lawmakers that White supremacis­t groups are among the top threats to U.S. national security.

“Within that racially-motivated violent extremism bucket, people ascribing to some kind of White supremacis­t-type ideology is certainly the biggest chunk of that,” FBI Director Christophe­r Wray told the House of Representa­tives during a hearing last month.

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