Lori Pilger / Lincoln Journal Star:We'll provide the entire Lincoln Journal Star item, as they have the nerve to demand one disable one's ad blocker.
FBI accuses white supremacist of terror attack on Amtrak train in rural Nebraska — The FBI says an armed 26-year-old Missouri man who breached a secured area to stop an Amtrak train in southwest Nebraska in October has links to a white supremacist group and expressed an interest in …Discussion:
Compare & contrast: Nebraska's white non-Muslim terrorist was armed & in progress. This San Francisco wanna-be was all talk but no action, & probably suborned by the F.B.I., yet rec'd. more media attention.The FBI says an armed 26-year-old Missouri man who breached a secured area to stop an Amtrak train in southwest Nebraska in October has links to a white supremacist group and expressed an interest in "killing black people," according to court documents unsealed Wednesday.
Taylor Michael Wilson, of St. Charles, Missouri, is charged in U.S. District Court in Lincoln with terrorism attacks and other violence against railroad carriers and mass transportation systems.
In an affidavit attached to the criminal complaint, FBI Special Agent Monte Czaplewski said there was probable cause to believe that electronic devices possessed by Wilson and firearms owned by him "have been used for or obtained in anticipation of engaging in or planning to engage in criminal offenses against the United States."
Just before 2 a.m. on Oct. 22, an assistant conductor felt the train braking, searched for what was causing it and found Wilson in the engineer's seat of the follow engine "playing with the controls," Czaplewski wrote.
The conductor, and others, subdued Wilson, then held him and waited for deputies from Furnas and Harlan counties to arrive in Oxford, 23 miles southwest of Holdrege, where the eastbound California Zephyr with about 175 people aboard stopped.
No injuries were reported.
Czaplewski said Wilson, who has a permit in Missouri to carry a concealed handgun, had a loaded .38-caliber handgun in his waistband, a speed loader in his pocket and a National Socialist Movement business card on him when he was arrested.
He also had a backpack with three more speed loaders, a box of ammunition, a knife, tin snips, scissors and a ventilation mask inside.
Wilson, who was traveling from Sacramento, California, to St. Louis, later was charged in Furnas County with felony criminal mischief and use of a deadly weapon during the commission of a felony.
In late October, a judge ordered Wilson to undergo a competency evaluation at his attorney's request. He later was found competent to proceed, according to court records.
His $100,000 bond was posted on Dec. 11 and he was released.
Two days later, according to the federal case, FBI agents searched Wilson's home in Missouri and found a hidden compartment with a handmade shield, as well as: "a tactical vest, 11 AR-15 (rifle) ammunition magazines with approximately 190 rounds of .223 ammunition, one drum-style ammunition magazine for a rifle, firearms tactical accessories (lights), 100 rounds of 9 mm ammunition, approximately 840 rounds of 5.45x39 rifle ammunition, white supremacy documents and paperwork, several additional handgun and rifle magazines, gunpowder, ammunition-reloading supplies, and a pressure plate."
Czaplewski said they also found 15 firearms, including a fully-automatic rifle, ammunition and firearms magazines, and a tactical body armor carrier with ceramic ballistic plates.
In the newly unsealed federal case, Czaplewski wrote that investigators had found videos and PDF files on Wilson's phone of a white supremacist banner over a highway, other alt-right postings and documents related to how to kill people.
He said an acquaintance contacted by the FBI said that Wilson had been acting strange since June and had joined an "alt-right" neo-Nazi group that he found while researching white supremacy forums online.
Czaplewski said agents believe Wilson had traveled with members of the group to the Unite the Right rally at Charlottesville, Virginia, in August, where a woman was killed and 19 injured when a man used his vehicle to ram a crowd of counter-protesters.
An informant told the FBI that Wilson has expressed an interest in "killing black people" and others besides whites, and they suspect Wilson was responsible for a road rage incident in April 2016 in St. Charles where a man pointed a gun at a black woman for no apparent reason while driving on Interstate 70, Czaplewski said.
Wilson now is in federal custody. He was arrested Dec. 23, a day after the complaint was filed under seal in federal court in Nebraska.
Everitt Aaron Jameson had a plan: He would travel to a remote campground in the mountains, where he would build explosives out of PVC pipe, gunpowder and nails.
He said he would store the bombs in his Modesto home, federal officials alleged, before using them in an attack on San Francisco’s Pier 39 that would involve funneling people into an area and shooting them with an assault rifle.
Jameson, a tow truck driver and former Marine who liked pro-terrorism posts on Facebook, laid out his plot during a December meeting with an undercover FBI employee he believed worked for Islamic State’s top leader.
Christmas Day, Jameson told the agent, would be the perfect day to carry out the attack. He told the agent he needed timers and remote detonators, and said he didn’t need an escape plan because he was “ready to die,” the FBI alleged.
A federal grand jury Thursday indicted the 26-year-old man on terror charges, accusing him of one count each of attempting to provide material support and resources to a designated foreign terrorist organization and distributing information relating to destructive devices.
Jameson is scheduled to be arraigned Friday. His federal defender could not be reached for comment.
Federal agents launched an investigation several months ago when an informant tipped them off to Jameson’s suspicious online activity. On Facebook, he liked and loved pro-Islamic State posts, including an image of Santa Claus standing in New York with dynamite above the caption: “ISIS post image of Santa with dynamite threatening attack on New York.”
In December, federal agents began communicating with Jameson on social media, at one point telling him “the Sheikhs” wanted to know how he was able to help.
“I can suit up and take myself to our brothers. Or whatever they need done here,” he told one agent. “I am ready. Give the word and it shall be done.”
A few days later, a second FBI employee set up an in-person meeting with Jameson. There, Jameson suggested he was well-versed in constructing bombs and said, “We need something along the lines of New York or San Bernardino,” according to court records.
Authorities believe he was referencing the Halloween truck attack in Manhattan that killed eight people and the 2015 terrorist attack in Southern California that left 14 people fatally shot.
At some point after the meeting, Jameson told the agent he had reconsidered and said, “I also don’t think I can do this after all.”
FBI agents searched Jameson’s home last month and found a Dec. 16 note signed by Abdallah abu Everitt ibn Gordon al-Amriki, which in part said, “I Abdallah [abu] Everitt ibn Gordon have committed these acts upon the Kuffar [non-Muslims], in the name of Dar al Islam [the Muslim world], Allahu Akbar!”
“You’ve Allowed Donald J Trump to give away Al Quds [Jerusalem] to the Jews. Both You and he are wrong, it belongs to the Muslemeen [Muslims],” the letter allegedly said. “Long Live Isil, Long Live Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.”
Authorities also seized firearms and ammunition from the home.
If convicted as charged, authorities said, Jameson faces up to 20 years in federal prison.
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