U.S. Prosecutors Unveil Charges Against Leaders of White Supremacist Gang 'The Terrorgram Collective'

U.S. prosecutors have charged two alleged leaders of a white supremacist group, 'The Terrorgram Collective,' with soliciting violence against minorities, government officials, and critical infrastructure. The group used Telegram to promote attacks, aiming to incite a race war and societal collapse. Both defendants are currently in custody.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Updated: 10-09-2024 00:15 IST | Created: 10-09-2024 00:15 IST
U.S. Prosecutors Unveil Charges Against Leaders of White Supremacist Gang 'The Terrorgram Collective'
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U.S. prosecutors unveiled criminal charges on Monday against two alleged leaders of a white supremacist gang, accusing them of soliciting attacks on Black, Jewish, LGBTQ people, and immigrants in hopes of inciting a race war.

The group, dubbed "The Terrorgram Collective", used the social media site Telegram to celebrate white supremacist attacks around the world and solicit racially motivated violence, according to an indictment unsealed in federal court in Sacramento, California. Dallas Humber, 34, of Elk Grove, California, and Matthew Allison, 37, of Boise, Idaho, each face 15 criminal counts, including soliciting hate crimes and providing material support to terrorism. The two were in custody, officials said; it was not immediately clear if they had lawyers.

The group's targets also included U.S. government officials and critical infrastructure sites, with an overall goal of causing societal collapse in the United States, U.S. Justice Department officials said during an online news conference. "The federal government is adapting and evolving its strategy to confront hate," said Kristen Clarke, the head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division. "Whether carried out on our streets or perpetrated by way of online platforms, we will follow the facts where they lead and use every tool available to hold perpetrators of hate accountable."

Humber and Allison helped create and promote a document that sought to justify the group's ideology and included detailed instructions on carrying out terror attacks, including how to build bombs, according to the indictment. The pair also collaborated on a list of "high-value" targets that included a sitting U.S. senator and a federal judge who were viewed as enemies of the white supremacist cause, prosecutors alleged.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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