• Welcome to the Internet Infidels Discussion Board.

This Week in Nazi violence (that we know of)

Don2 (Don1 Revised)

Contributor
Joined
Apr 1, 2004
Messages
14,423
Location
USA
Basic Beliefs
non-practicing agnostic
WASHINGTON — The warning signs were there, flaring up from Nicholas Giampa’s pseudonymous Twitter feed for over a year. The alt-right lingo and the swastikas. The advertisements of violence.

Giampa’s girlfriend’s parents, Buckley Kuhn-Fricker, 43, and Scott Fricker, 48, were aware of the teenager’s burgeoning extremism. Kuhn-Fricker had found frightening tweets from Giampa on her daughter’s phone. Twitter was where Giampa, a Papa John’s employee and an anime enthusiast, let his malevolence run amok.

Kuhn-Fricker and Fricker had seen enough to say something. Days later, Giampa fatally shot them in their Virginia home, police say.
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entr...-parents-virginia_us_5a4d0797e4b0b0e5a7aa4780

A Missouri man linked to a white supremacist group who brought an Amtrak train to a stop in rural Nebraska had plans to carry out acts of terrorism, according to court documents.

Taylor M. Wilson, 26, from St. Cloud, Missouri has been charged in federal court with terrorism and violence against railroad carriers, according to the Lincoln Journal Star.

Wilson was a ticketed passenger aboard a train from California to Illinois on Oct. 22 when he entered a restricted area, sat in the engineer’s seat and triggered the emergency brakes in Oxford, Nebraska.

Wilson was found with a fully loaded .38 caliber handgun, along with several “speed loaders,” and a business card from the National Socialist Movement, one of the most prominent neo-Nazi groups in the US, FBI Special Agent Monte Czaplewski wrote in the affidavit.
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/suspected-neo-nazi-charged-terrorism-report-article-1.3739060
 
Back
Top Bottom