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This story will flat make you scratch you head- mind boggling!

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    This story will flat make you scratch you head- mind boggling!

    This story is evidence of several things
    1. Extremist have no principles or guiding standards, example neo-nazi turned Muslim.
    2. The press doesent know their right from their left, socialist views aren't right wing.
    3. This world is nuckin futs


    Florida slaying puts spotlight on possible neo-Nazi plot as details emerge

    Published August 23, 2017 Fox News
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    Devon Arthurs is the co-founder of the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen.
    Devon Arthurs is the co-founder of the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen. (AP)
    The slayings of two young men in Florida, allegedly at the hands of their roommate, has exposed disturbing evidence of a credible neo-Nazi threat to public safety, federal investigators say.


    Devon Arthurs, the 19-year-old co-founder of the obscure neo-Nazi group "Atomwaffen Division," was arrested in the May 19 fatal shooting of his roommates, 18-year-old Andrew Oneschuk and 22-year-old Jeremy Himmelman.

    At the time of the arrest, officials said Arthurs claimed he killed Oneschuk and Himmelman to thwart a domestic terrorist attack by Atomwaffen, which is German for “atomic weapon.”

    “I prevented the deaths of a lot of people,” Arthurs said in a rambling statement, according to officials. Asked why his roommates planned such an attack, he said, “Because they want to build a Fourth Reich.”

    This undated photo provided by Kianna Kaizer, shows Jeremy Himmelman and his girlfriend Kianna Kaizer. Himmelman was fatally shot along with his friend Andrew Oneschuk, 18, by a roommate in the Tampa apartment the men all shared. The friends met through an obscure neo-Nazi group called Atomwaffen Division. After his arrest for the shooting, roommate Devon Arthurs told police that he killed Himmelman and Oneschuk because they along with Atomwaffen’s leader Brandon Russell were planning to bomb synagogues, nuclear facilities and other sites. (Kianna Kaizer via AP)
    This undated photo provided by Kianna Kaizer, shows Jeremy Himmelman and his girlfriend Kianna Kaizer. (Kianna Kaizer via AP)
    Atomwaffen doesn’t have near the numbers or notoriety of some of the white nationalist and neo-Nazi groups that gathered in Charlottesville, Va., for a rally that led to deadly clashes earlier this month.

    William Tschantre, 20, another member of Atomwaffen, denied the group was planning any attacks, saying the members were simply a band of so-called trolls who delight in provoking outrage with stunts.


    “I’m a neo-Nazi. I am not a monster,” he told the Associated Press. “We’re not here to, like, bomb the U.S. government. That’s absolutely ridiculous.”

    The scene depicted inside the young men’s residence, however, paints a different picture, authorities say.

    This booking photo provided by Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office shows Brandon Russell. FBI agents have filed explosives charges against Russell. (Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office via AP)
    Brandon Russell is facing charges related to explosives that were found. (AP)
    Inside the Tampa apartment – which Arthurs, Oneschuk and Himmelman shared with 21-year-old Brandon Russell – police found guns, ammunition and bomb-making material, along with a framed photo of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh.

    In the condo’s garage, bomb squad technicians found volatile explosive material stored in a cooler, near homemade detonator components and several pounds of ammonium nitrate. Two sources of radiation were also detected on the premises, authorities said.

    Arthurs claims Russell knew nothing of the killings, but accused him of stockpiling explosives to bomb power lines, nuclear reactors and synagogues.

    In anonymous internet posts, Atomwaffen members hailed Oneschuk and Himmelman as fallen heroes and assailed Arthurs as a race traitor.

    This April 2017 photo provided by his family shows Andrew Oneschuk during his 18th birthday at his family's home in Massachusetts. Devon Arthurs, 18, co-founder of the Atomwaffen Division neo-Nazi group, told police detectives he killed his roommates Oneschuk and 22-year-old Jeremy Himmelman in Tampa, Fla., on May 19, 2017. (Christin Oneschuk via AP)
    This April 2017 photo provided by his family shows Andrew Oneschuk during his 18th birthday party, (Christin Oneschuk via AP)
    Relatives and friends of the two slain men reject any neo-Nazi labels, but do not dispute they held far right-wing ideologies. They say the two men were moving on to new phases in their lives.

    “Jeremy went through a lot of struggle in his life, and national socialism offered him the rigidity he desired, and offered him solutions for things out of his control,” Kianna Kaizer, Himmelman’s girlfriend said in an email. “So it’s been really hard to try and tell his family, but yes he did hold white supremacist beliefs and national socialist beliefs.”

    According to relatives, the four young men met online last year, and the lure of a rent-free home and the prospect of bountiful fishing convinced Himmelman and Oneshuck to move from Massachusetts to Florida for the summer.

    Himmelman was in a financial rut and open to a fresh start when Russell began pressuring him to move to Tampa, friends and family said. He had toyed with joining the military, they said, but instead planned to use his Florida experience to figure out his next move.

    And Andrew Oneschuk's father said his son had met with a Navy recruiter in April, on his 18th birthday, and looked forward to starting a military career.

    Once the pair arrived in Florida, tensions between the roommates quickly mounted. Kaizer said Himmelman and Oneschuk often teased Arthurs for having no job and spending most of his time playing video games.

    "Jeremy went down there expecting a break from the stress he was under in Massachusetts," she said. "As soon as Jeremy arrived in Florida, the stark difference between the promises made and reality were apparent."

    According to Tschantre, Arthurs recent conversion to Islam and his religious rhetoric also annoyed other Atomwaffen members. He said the night before the shooting, Arthurs got into an argument with other members online, which Tschantre said he suspects could have played a part in triggering Arthurs' anger into violence the next evening.

    Earlier this month, prosecutors said they would not seek the death penalty against Arthurs, who faces two counts of first-degree murder. Russell, who was not involved in the killings, is facing charges related to the explosives recovered.

    Russell has denied any plans to make a bomb, saying the materials were used to boost model rockets.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.
    Last edited by Playa; 08-23-2017, 06:20 PM.

    #2
    When I was 19, I was hunting, fishing, working and doing my best to take "night fishing" trips with hot chicks. What the HELL is wrong with these people?? Maybe their life sucked more than mine. That's all I can figure.

    Comment


      #3
      We need to be scared of fanatical people of all types! That is one crazy story.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Livin'2hunt View Post
        When I was 19, I was hunting, fishing, working and doing my best to take "night fishing" trips with hot chicks. What the HELL is wrong with these people?? Maybe their life sucked more than mine. That's all I can figure.
        it all has to do with their upbringing, and their education. history is not taught anymore and their parents didn't learn much either. they never went outside in the morning at school and watched the flag raised and recited the pledge of allegiance. these crap birds have no allegiance to anyone or anything but themselves.

        the only way to turn this around is to get rid of the dept. of education, and the leftist teachers and get good solid Americans in there as teachers.

        only then will things begin to turn around; but it will take a lot of time.

        Comment

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