Kansas Trio Charged with Plot to Bomb Somalis Day After Election

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Kansas said three men who were part of a militia group that referred to themselves as the “Crusaders” were planning to bomb a neighborhood of Somali immigrants to “wake people up” the day after the election.

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Curtis Allen and Gavin Wright, both 49 and of Liberal, Kansas, and Patrick Eugene Stein, 47, of Wright, Kansas, were each charged in federal court on one count of conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction.

Wright owns the G & G Modular Home Center in Liberal, and Allen is one of his employees. Stein is a leader of the militia.

According to the unsealed criminal complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas, the FBI has been investigating the southwestern Kansas militia group since February. “This is a militia group whose members support and espouse sovereign citizen, anti-government, anti-Muslim, and antiimmigrant extremist beliefs,” said the affidavit, who “have been regularly meeting and planning to carry out a violent attack against Muslims in their community and have taken steps in furtherance of accomplishing this, including identifying a target location.”

The FBI investigation was sparked by a “reliable, paid” confidential informant within the Crusaders militia, who covertly recorded meetings. The group was also monitored through social media and other open sources.

The complaint says the three men charged were conspiring “to carry out a domestic terrorist attack by using an improvised explosive device (IED) to destroy an apartment complex in Garden City, Kansas, which contains a mosque and is home to many Muslims,” referred to as “cockroaches” by the group. “They have routinely expressed a hatred for Muslims, individuals of Somali descent, and immigrants. They chose the target location based on their hatred of these groups, their perception that these groups represent a threat to American society, a desire to inspire other militia groups, and a desire to ‘wake people up.’”

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Stein, the affidavit continues, conducted surveillance on a mall frequented by Somalis, a mosque that was located within an apartment complex, and vehicles believed to belong to Somalis or other Muslims. On one of these expeditions the informant was driving Stein when he at “various times yelled at Somali women dressed in traditional garb, calling them ‘fucking raghead bitches.'”

Stein allegedly went on these surveillance trips with a pistol, an assault rifle with several magazines, a ballistic vest, and a night vision scope. In a recorded conference call of the group in April, Stein reportedly said, “Make sure if you start using your bow on them cockroaches, make sure you dip them in pig’s blood before you shoot them.”

In May, states the criminal complaint, Stein said “he wanted to get a .22, go over to Garden City, Kansas, start kicking in the doors of the Somali apartments, and kill them one by one. He wanted to use a .22 because it was quieter and he also mentioned he wanted to buy or make a silencer.”

After the Orlando nightclub shooting in June, the militia group met in a field — to avoid FBI surveillance, though the informant was in on the meeting — and Stein “proposed carrying out an attack similar to the Orlando shooting against a Muslim refugee location in Garden City.” In a recorded June conference call, Stein allegedly said, “The only fucking way this country’s ever going to get turned around is it will be a bloodbath and it will be a nasty, messy motherfucker.” He also allegedly suggested that a local church helping refugees be “burnt to the ground.”

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In July, the complaint continues, Stein, Allen and Wright met at Wright’s mobile home business “and discussed a wide range of potential targets, including Muslim-occupied apartment complexes, residences, and places of worship, city/county commission meetings, local public officials, landlords who rent property to Muslim refugees, and organizations providing assistance to Muslim refugees… the group brainstormed various methods of attack, including murder, kidnapping, rape, and arson.”

Stein was allegedly recorded by the informant at the meeting saying, “When we go on operations there’s no leaving anyone behind, even if it’s a 1-year old, I’m serious. I guarantee if I go on a mission those little fuckers are going bye-bye.”

The group decided in August that they would plant an attack against the apartment complex with the mosque, the affidavit says. “They decided that they would obtain four vehicles, fill them with explosives, and park them at the four corners of the apartment complex to create a big explosion.” They allegedly planned construction of the explosive devices to be detonated via cell phone, and “the group researched mosque prayer times online to determine when the most people would be around.” Allen “decided he would work on the group’s manifesto to release in conjunction with the attack.”

The informant hooked up the accused with an undercover FBI agent posing as a person who could get the group weapons and materials for the IEDs.

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On Wednesday, Stein met up with the undercover agent and his colleagues at at a rural location in Finney County, Kansas. The complaint says Stein agreed to show the undercover agent his chosen target, and “discussed trading drugs for explosives.”

Allen had been arrested the day before after a domestic violence call from his girlfriend. Stein allegedly told the undercover FBI agent that the girlfriend could have been ratting out the plan to law enforcement and that she “needs to disappear.” The girlfriend had showed responding officers “a large amount of ammunition, brass casings, components and tools for use in the manufacture of ammunition and firearms” in their home.

When Allen was later stopped on Highway 83, police reportedly found “a large amount of ammunition, multiple AR-15 magazines, an AK47 magazine, and a Glock handgun magazine, all loaded with ammunition” and “a tool used to create baffles for firearm silencers or suppressors.” Officers seized “close to a metric ton of ammunition” from Allen’s residence.

Allen’s girlfriend later told the FBI that she saw “a white powdery substance being produced on the counter” at Wright’s mobile home business, as well as “glassware and a long glass stirring stick being used to manufacture the explosives,” “hydrogen peroxide, fuel tablets and cheesecloth being used for the manufacture of explosives,” and “the substance being cooled in an ice bath.” The substance was believed to be Hexamethylene Triperoxide Diamine, which has been used in other attacks including the 7/7 London tube bombings.

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In announcing the charges Friday, Acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall of the District of Kansas said the investigation took investigators “deep into a hidden culture of hatred and violence.”

“Many Kansans may find it as startling as I do that such things could happen here,” Beall added, stating the planned bombing date was Nov. 9 as the suspects didn’t want to interfere with the general election.

Stein, Wright and Allen face the possibility of life behind bars on the WMD charge.

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