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| Guns, ammunition and tactical gear seized by police near Los Angeles after arresting a man who threatened a mass shooting (AFP Photo/Handout) |
Guns,
ammunition and tactical gear seized by police near Los Angeles after arresting
a man who threatened a mass shooting (AFP Photo/Handout)
Washington
(AFP) - One man had three assault rifles, extra-large magazines and a gas mask.
Another had over 18 weapons, including sawed-off shotguns, AR-15s, and a
grenade launcher.
Earlier
this year, the two might not have drawn the attention of US law enforcement.
But ever
since a young racist slaughtered 22 at a Texas Walmart, and another man
murdered 10 in Ohio three weekends ago, the FBI has arrested at least seven
right-wing extremists in what appears to be a more earnest effort to target
white nationalist threats in the United States.
Vaults of
guns, crates of ammunition
These are
some examples of the deeply disturbing cases.
On August
8, a 23-year-old Las Vegas security guard who communicated with neo-Nazis was
arrested with bomb-making materials and indications he might target a synagogue
or gay nightclub.
A week
later, a Connecticut man, 22, was detained after suggesting online that he
would carry out a mass shooting. At his home, investigators found multiple hand
and long guns, camouflage outfits, titanium body armor and a combat helmet.
On August
12, an 18-year-old who voiced support for mass shootings was indicted for
threatening to kill law enforcement officers. At his home, he had a vault full
of weapons and 10,000 rounds of ammunition.
Four days
after that, Florida police arrested a 25-year-old man who texted his girlfriend
that he was planning a mass shooting and envisioned "100 good kills."
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Members and
supporters of the National Socialist Movement, one of the largest
neo-Nazi
groups in the US, hold a rally on April 21, 2018 in Newnan, Georgia
(AFP
Photo/SPENCER PLATT)
|
On August
17, a 20-year-old white nationalist was arrested in Ohio for threatening a
Jewish community center. At his home, he had amassed multiple semi-automatic
assault rifles, high-capacity magazines, and a gas mask.
And this
week, police in Long Beach, California, arrested a man for making a mass
shooting threat, and found at his home several illegal assault rifles,
thousands of rounds of ammunition, and high-capacity magazines.
FBI
waking up
The arrests
brought to light the extent of the threat of extremist ideology on the right,
and its ability to motivate uniformly young, white men into acting on their
hate.
They also,
analysts said, mark a change after US justice authorities have been accused for
years of doing little about domestic terrorism, which has now killed more
Americans since 2002 than Islamist extremism.
"I
think that federal law enforcement understand that this is at the highest level
of concern," said Brian Levin, head of the Study for Hate and Extremism at
California State University-San Bernardino.
"They
are certainly devoting a decent amount of investigative resources."
President
Donald Trump has been criticized for not roundly condemning white nationalists
and neo-Nazis in the wake of several shootings and violent incidents, in
particular after a deadly neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in 2017.
Analysts
say that reticence left the FBI not fully invested in confronting the threat.
A NBC-Wall Street Journal poll conducted earlier this month and released Sunday showed that 56 percent of those surveyed believe that race relations in the US have gotten worse since Trump's election.
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Mass
shootings like the one at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas have forced US law
enforcement to reckon with a broad threat from white nationalist extremists
(AFP Photo/Mark RALSTON)
|
A NBC-Wall Street Journal poll conducted earlier this month and released Sunday showed that 56 percent of those surveyed believe that race relations in the US have gotten worse since Trump's election.
The FBI
feels held back from opening investigations by Trump's refusal to criticize
people he considers part of his loyal voter base, former FBI terrorism
supervisor Dave Gomez told The Washington Post.
"It's
a no-win situation for the FBI agent and his supervisor."
850
domestic terror probes
But the
agency has now clearly recognized the priority.
FBI
Director Christopher Wray said in July that they have 850 open "domestic
terror" investigations and have made 100 arrests so far. The majority of
those cases, he said, are "what you might call white supremacist
violence."
But Wray
also stressed that they were targeting crimes rather than an ideology -- a
sharply different approach than that for Islamic State group and Al-Qaeda
sympathizers, who can be arrested for expressing support for outlawed
jihadists.
Wray's
predecessor Andrew McCabe said Friday that the agency is overcoming that
wariness, even if it could mean encroachments on civil liberties.
"I
think the FBI appears to be refocusing, and augmenting their efforts on the
domestic terrorist threat," McCabe told CNN.
Now there
is "a much higher degree of sensitivity... to the statements which are now
seen as predictors of potentially mass shootings," he said.
Levin said
the arrests also show that, after the shock of recent mass shootings, the US
public is more attuned to the ideological threat and ready to report any hints
by perpetrators of their radical ideologies.
"I
think that has created a familiarity among the public with what certain warning
signs are," he said.



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