Current:Home > Contact2 charged in plot to solicit attacks on minorities, officials and infrastructure on Telegram -Wealth Evolution Experts
2 charged in plot to solicit attacks on minorities, officials and infrastructure on Telegram
View
Date:2025-04-15 06:50:06
WASHINGTON (AP) — Two people who prosecutors say were motivated by white supremacist ideology have been arrested on charges that they used the social media messaging app Telegram to encourage acts of violence against minorities, government officials and critical infrastructure in the United States, the Justice Department said Monday.
The defendants, identified as Dallas Erin Humber and Matthew Robert Allison, face 15 federal counts in the Eastern District of California, including charges that accuse them of soliciting hate crimes and the murder of federal officials, distributing bombmaking instructions and conspiring to provide material support to terrorists.
Humber, 34, of Elk Grove, California, and Allison, 37, of Boise, Idaho were arrested Friday. It was not immediately clear if either had an attorney who could speak on his behalf.
The indictment accuses the two of leading a transnational group known as Terrorgram that operates on Telegram and espouses white supremacist ideology and violence to its follows.
Justice Department officials say the men used the app to transmit bomb-making instructions, to distribute a list of potential targets for assassination — including a federal judge, a senator and a former U.S. attorney — and to celebrate people accused in prior acts or plots of violence, such as the stabbing last month of five people outside a mosque in Turkey and the July arrest of an 18-year-old accused of planning to attack an electrical substation to advance white supremacist views.
“I think it would be difficult to overstate, the danger and risks that that this group posed,” Assistant Attorney General Matthew Olsen, the Justice Department’s top national security official, said at a news conference.
The pair’s exhortations to their follows to commit violence included statements such as “Take Action Now” and “Do your part,” according to an indictment unsealed Monday.
“Today’s action makes clear that the department will hold perpetrators accountable, including those who hide behind computer screens, in seeking to carry out bias-motivated violence,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke, the department’s top civil rights official.
The founder and CEO of Telegram, Pavel Durov, was detained by French authorities last month on charges of allowing the platform’s use for criminal activity. Durov responded to the charges by saying he shouldn’t have been targeted personally.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Germans commemorate ‘Night of Broken Glass’ terror as antisemitism is on the rise again
- Kenya says it won’t deploy police to fight gangs in Haiti until they receive training and funding
- Officials in Russia-annexed Crimea say private clinics have stopped providing abortions
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- The average long-term US mortgage rate falls to 7.5% in second-straight weekly drop
- Yes, That Was Jared Leto Climbing New York's Empire State Building
- Lainey Wilson wins big at CMA Awards
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Rome scrubs antisemitic graffiti from Jewish Quarter on 85th anniversary of the Nazi Kristallnacht
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Kenya says it won’t deploy police to fight gangs in Haiti until they receive training and funding
- Watch as barred owl hitches ride inside man's truck, stunning driver
- Federal prosecutors say high-end brothels counted elected officials, tech execs, military officers as clients
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Lyrics can be used as evidence during rapper Young Thug’s trial on gang and racketeering charges
- Yes, That Was Jared Leto Climbing New York's Empire State Building
- The average long-term US mortgage rate falls to 7.5% in second-straight weekly drop
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
The UK’s interior minister sparks furor by accusing police of favoring pro-Palestinian protesters
After Ohio vote, advocates in a dozen states are trying to put abortion on 2024 ballots
Officials in Russia-annexed Crimea say private clinics have stopped providing abortions
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Citi illegally discriminated against Armenian-Americans, feds say
L.A. Reid sued by former employee alleging sexual assault, derailing her career
Video chat service Omegle shuts down following years of user abuse claims