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Will ZOGling Whigger Ass-clowns Turn Feral on ZOG/Babylon in 2019?

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  • Will ZOGling Whigger Ass-clowns Turn Feral on ZOG/Babylon in 2019?

    Will ZOGling Whigger Ass-clowns Turn Feral on ZOG/Babylon in 2019?


    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9111#post19111
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9111#post19111
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9111#post19111



    ZOGling whiggers have theyz' tails up against the wall.

    Will they turn feral out of desperation and work on taking ZOG down? Or will they wait for ZOG/Babylon the Third and Final, The Mighty Evil Empire, to implode into Ten Thousand Warlords and either go out in an imperial bang or a localized whimper?

    .

    _________________________
    http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/lindstedt
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  • #2
    Coast Guard lieutenant, dubbed 'domestic terrorist,' had hit list of media bigs and Dem lawmakers: prosecutors

    Coast Guard lieutenant, dubbed 'domestic terrorist,' had hit list of media bigs and Dem lawmakers: prosecutors

    By Samuel Chamberlain | Fox News



    https://www.foxnews.com/us/coast-gua...rs-prosecutors
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9333#post19333
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...335#post193335

    A U.S. Coast Guard lieutenant arrested last week on weapons and drug charges is a white nationalist who apparently had a hit list of Democratic lawmakers and activists as well as prominent media personalities, federal prosecutors said Wednesday.

    In a motion for pretrial detention filed in federal court in Maryland, authorities said Lt. Christopher Paul Hasson, 49, was arrested Friday and charged with unlawful possession of a firearm and an opioid called Tramadol.

    However, the filing described the charges as "the proverbial tip of the iceberg," and referred to Hasson as "a domestic terrorist" who meant to "murder innocent civilians on a scale rarely seen in this country."

    The filing was first noted by researchers from George Washington University's Program on Extremism.

    Prosecutors say Hasson regularly read a manifesto written by Anders Behring Breivik, a Norwegian far-right extremist who killed 77 people in a pair of 2011 terror attacks, and stockpiled weapons and ammunition. According to the documents, federal agents recovered 15 firearms and "conservatively" more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition from Hasson's "cramped basement apartment" in Silver Spring, Maryland.

    According to the document, Hasson organized a spreadsheet of so-called "traitors" that he subdivided into three categories: A,B, and C. So-called "Category A" traitors included Democratic Sens. Chuck Schumer of New York, Tim Kaine of Virginia, Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut (referred to as "Sen blumen jew" in the spreadsheet), Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts (referred to as "poca warren") Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Cory Booker of New Jersey and Kamala Harris of California.

    Also listed in "Category A" were House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Rep. Alexandria Oscasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., MSNBC personalities Joe Scarborough, Chris Hayes, and Ari Melber as well as CNN host Don Lemon. Names in the "Category B" list included Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., CNN personalities Chris Cuomo and Van Jones, and the Democratic Socialists of America.

    Prosecutors say Hasson Googled topics including "what if trump illegally impeached," "best place in dc to see congress people," and "civil war if trump impeached" roughly a month before his arrest.

    The filing said Hasson had "espoused extremist views for years" and quoted a letter he drafted to "a known American neo-Nazi leader" in September 2017, nearly two months after the deadly violence at a white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. In the letter, Hasson described himself as "a long time White Nationalist, having been a skinhead 30 plus years ago before my time in the military." Hasson added that "I fully support the idea of a white homeland ... We need a white homeland as Europe seems lost. How long we can hold out there and prevent n-----ization of the Northwest until whites wake up on their own or are forcibly made to make a decision whether to roll over and die and to stand up remains to be seen."

    Three months earlier, prosecutors say Hasson drafted an email to "friends" in which he said he was "dreaming of a way to kill almost every last person on the earth. I think a plague would be most successful but how to I acquire the needed/ Spanish flu, botulism, anthrax not sure yet but will find something."

    In the same email, Hasson mused: "Start with biological attacks followed by attack [sic] on food supply ... Two pronged [sic] attack seems it might before successful. Institute a bombing/sniper campaign."

    Prosecutors said Hasson was an acquisitions officer for the National Security Cutter Acquisition Program who had been assigned to the Coast Guard's headquarters in Washington since June 2016. He previously served in the Marine Corps and the Army National Guard. A Marine Corps spokesperson said Hasson served in the Corps between 1988 and 1992 and worked as an aircraft mechanic on F/A-18 Hornets.

    "An active duty Coast Guard member stationed at Coast Guard Headquarters in Washington, D.C., was arrested last week on illegal weapons and drug charges as a result of an ongoing investigation led by Coast Guard Investigation Services, in cooperation with the FBI and the Dept. of Justice," Coast Guard spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Scott McBride said in a statement. "Because this is an open investigation, the Coast Guard has no further details at this time."

    A detention hearing for Hasson is scheduled for 1 p.m. Thursday in federal court in Greenbelt, Maryland, just outside Washington.

    Fox News' Jake Gibson and Lucas Tomlinson contributed to this report.

    .


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    • #3
      Maryland: White Nationalist Coast Guard Man Arrested for Google Searches

      Maryland: White Nationalist Coast Guard Man Arrested for Google Searches


      https://dailystormer.name/maryland-w...ogle-searches/
      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9111#post19111
      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9341#post19341




      The Daily $permer
      .


      .

      http://www.dailystormer.su/
      .

      Comment


      • #4
        Coast Guard Officer Plotted Terror Attacks at His Desk, Filings Say

        Coast Guard Officer Plotted Terror Attacks at His Desk, Filings Say

        By Dave Philipps
        Feb. 21, 2019



        https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/21/u...st-attack.html
        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9343#post19343
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9343#post19343

        Sitting in an office in Coast Guard headquarters, where the mission is to ensure the safety of the nation, Lt. Christopher P. Hasson took illicit opiates and plotted terror attacks that he hoped would spark a race war, according to the authorities.

        To outward appearances, the 49-year-old lieutenant was a suburban father with a desk job supplying Coast Guard ships, who was glimpsed by neighbors coming and going in uniform or walking his dogs with his wife.

        But in court filings, prosecutors said he was also a “domestic terrorist” and self-described white nationalist who studied the methods of the Unabomber, the Virginia Tech gunman and other extremist killers; stockpiled guns and drugs; drew up a target list of prominent cable news journalists and Democratic politicians to be killed; and wrote, prosecutors said, of wanting “to murder innocent civilians on a scale rarely seen in this country.”

        Lieutenant Hasson, who was arrested last week, appeared in federal court in Greenbelt, Md., on Thursday wearing crimson jail clothes, his hair closely cropped. He showed little emotion and declined to speak as prosecutors and his lawyer argued the question of whether he should be released from custody until his trial.

        Magistrate Judge Charles B. Day said no, at least for the next 14 days, while prosecutors consider further charges beyond the relatively minor gun and drug possession counts he now faces. Prosecutors indicated that they would probably file terrorism-related charges before the 14-day period is up.

        “The sheer number and force of the weapons that were recovered from Mr. Hasson’s residence in this case, coupled with the disturbing nature of his writings, appear to reflect a very significant threat to the safety of our community, particularly given the position of trust that Mr. Hasson held with the United States government,” Robert K. Hur, the United States attorney for the District of Maryland, said in the hearing.

        In Lieutenant Hasson’s defense, his lawyer, Julie Stelzig, depicted him as a loving husband and father with no criminal record and 28 years of military service. She called the cache of weapons that federal agents found in his basement apartment — including high-powered rifles, assault rifles, shotguns and pistols — “modest at best,” and said that in a country with an estimated 363 million guns, it was unremarkable for a Marine Corps veteran like him to own 15.


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        • #5
          Coast Guard Lt. Christopher Hasson Wrote to Notorious Neo-Nazi Harold Covington

          Coast Guard Lt. Christopher Hasson Wrote to Notorious Neo-Nazi Harold Covington


          https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/...rold-covington
          http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9377#post19377
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9377#post19377



          .

          A U.S. Coast Guard lieutenant accused of being a domestic terrorist wrote a letter to prominent white supremacist Harold Covington discussing the idea of a “white homeland” and using “focused violence” to achieve that goal.

          Christopher Paul Hasson, 49, penned the letter to Covington, a resident of Bremerton, Washington, and the founder of The Northwest Front, in September 2017.

          Covington was a longtime proponent of creating a white ethnostate in the Pacific Northwest.

          The correspondence from Hasson wasn’t the first time Covington, who died in July 2018, crossed paths with or praised mass killers.

          Covington’s writings also inspired Dylann Storm Roof, who is on federal death row after being convicted of killing nine people at a South Carolina church in 2015.

          Frazier Glenn Miller, convicted of killing three people outside the Jewish Community Center and Village Shalom care center in Overland Park, Kansas, on April 13, 2014, spent time with Covington in the National Socialist Party of America in 1976.

          Covington was once a prominent figure in the racist movement, although in the years leading up to his death the movement had left him behind.

          But Covington still produced podcasts, spreading the conspiracy theory that Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh had as many as seven accomplices.

          Covington is not the only old-guard white supremacist whose writing inspired killers. McVeigh famously modeled his 1995 attack, which killed 168, on William Pierce’s book “The Turner Diaries.”

          Covington met with William Luther Pierce, the founder of the National Alliance, several times over the years until his death in 2002, and said he corresponded “regularly” with him.

          “There could be no question that Bill Pierce was probably the most outstanding personality that modern white nationalism has produced,” Covington said in a June 7, 2018, podcast.

          Covington proved prominent in the 1970s and 1980s as a notorious figure in American neo-Nazi circles. His ideas for a white ethnostate continue to energize the racist “alt-right,” and Covington’s organization, the Northwest Front, still exists.

          While Covington didn’t attend a National Socialist White People’s Party rally in Greensboro, N.C., in 1979, several of his associates did. At that rally, the North Carolina unit of the group took part in the killings of five left-wing, anti-Klan protesters.

          The conflict became known as the “Greensboro Massacre.” Covington never faced criminal charges and wasn’t found liable in a later civil trial.

          A longtime member of the National Socialist Party of America, Covington spent decades attempting to further racist causes. He worked in the former African nation of Rhodesia to preserve white rule and advocated a plan to turn the Pacific Northwest into a white homeland, an idea also known as the Northwest Territorial Imperative.

          Covington’s effort spanned most of his life, beginning in 1971 when he graduated high school and joined the U.S. Army. That year he also joined the National Socialist White People’s Party, the political successor to the American Nazi Party.

          Two years later, though, he was discharged from the Army and began roaming the world espousing racial separation.

          Covington also had a hand in founding the Combat 18 (C18) terror network based in England. In 1997, seven members of C18 were arrested for sending mail bombs to prominent leftist activists, mixed-race celebrity couples and members of a rival faction within C18 itself. That same year, two members of the group took part in the killing of 28-year-old Chris Castle in a dispute with that same rival faction.

          Covington again wasn’t charged with any crime but helped found the neo-Nazi group that openly advocated violence against immigrants, leftists and ethnic minorities.

          Hasson’s attorney, federal public defender Julie Stelzig, confirmed Hasson’s link to Covington during a detention hearing Thursday in federal court in Maryland.

          A judge ordered Hasson held in jail for 14 days while prosecutors and the FBI continue investigating.

          .

          Comment


          • #6
            Coast Guard officer accused of terror plot to be released on bail

            Coast Guard officer accused of terror plot to be released on bail

            By Jeff Mordock - The Washington Times
            Updated: 4:18 p.m. on Thursday, April 25, 2019



            https://www.washingtontimes.com/news...-granted-bail/
            http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9633#post19633
            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9633#post19633




            Hasson's modest stash as stacked up by ZOG piglice - 2 shotguns, 3 .22 rifles, 3 poodle shooters, one sniper rifle, 6 pistols with ammo
            .


            The U.S. Coast Guard officer accused of plotting a massive terrorist attack on left-leaning politicians and journalists will be released on bail, a federal judge ruled Thursday.

            “I do not find detention is appropriate. He’s entitled to be released,” said U.S. District Judge Charles B. Day in a Greenbelt, Maryland courtroom.

            Federal prosecutors have argued that Lt. Christopher P. Hasson was amassing weapons in preparation for a major terror attack. They said he planned to murder civilians “on a scale rarely seen in this country.”

            But prosecutors have not charged him with any terrorism-related offenses since Feb. 15 arrest and subsequent indictment. U.S. Attorney Thomas Windom told the court Thursday those charges aren’t coming, either.

            Instead, the government has lodged gun and drug charges against Mr. Hasson, accusing him of possessing an illegal silencer and a banned substance. He has pleaded not guilty.

            Mr. Hasson’s public defender Liz Oyer has accused the government of leveling “inflammatory” accusations against her client without producing evidence of a terrorist plot.

            “The government has failed to deliver,” Ms. Oyer said Thursday. “They have not come forward with evidence Lt. Hasson is a domestic terrorist because he is not.”

            Mr. Windom strongly argued against releasing Mr. Hasson, pointing to well-known terrorism cases, saying their perpetrators merely had ideas until they acted upon those impulses.

            Judge Day said the absence of terrorism charges made it difficult to hold Mr. Hasson ahead of a likely trial. He noted the government didn’t even pursue a more serious charge such as stalking one of his intended targets.

            “The defendant is not charged with any terrorist activity, but clearly there is no intent to charge Mr. Hasson with anything other than what is in the indictment,” he said.

            Still, the judge said he has “grave concerns” about Mr. Hasson based on the details prosecutors have presented. Judge Day said Mr. Hasson must have “a whole lot of supervision.”

            “I got to find someone who has eyes and ears on him like nobody’s business,” he said.

            Ms. Oyer said Mr. Hasson’s wife and children have relocated to the Virginia Beach, Va., area since his arrest. She also said the defendant’s parents and brother live in Arizona, offering both locations as possibilities to hold Mr. Hasson while he awaits trial.

            Judge Day rejected the idea of shipping Mr. Hasson off to Arizona, saying he was more receptive to the Virginia option. He left it up to prosecutors and Ms. Oyer to suss out the conditions of Mr. Hasson’s release.

            It is not clear when Mr. Hasson would be released. A hearing on the terms of his release has not yet been scheduled.

            Mr. Hasson’s wife was in the courtroom for the hearing. Her jaw dropped after Judge Day ordered Mr. Hasson’s release. She refused to answer questions from reporters as she exited the courtroom.

            In court filings unsealed in February, prosecutors cited letters Mr. Hasson wrote to himself ranting against liberal ideology and claim he compiled a hit list that included House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and MSNBC and CNN journalists.

            Earlier this week, prosecutors filed court papers indicating two unnamed Supreme Court justices were also among Mr. Hasson’s intended targets. He conducted internet searches to find out where they lived, they type of security they have and which restaurants they ate at.

            Mr. Hasson, a former Marine, worked at the Coast Guard headquarters Washington, DC. He remains on active duty until the case against him is resolved.

            .

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            • #7
              Coast Guard officer called ‘terrorist’ due back in court

              Coast Guard officer called ‘terrorist’ due back in court


              https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-...back-in-court/
              http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9652#post19652
              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9652#post19652
              .


              Authorities found 15 guns and more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition when they searched the apartment of Coast Guard Lt. Christopher Paul Hasson in February.
              Prosecutors allege he was a self-proclaimed white nationalist plotting "to murder innocent civilians. (U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland records)

              .


              COLLEGE PARK, Md. — A Coast Guard lieutenant whom prosecutors describe as a domestic terrorist is due back in court next week for a hearing on the conditions of his possible release from federal custody.

              During a detention hearing Thursday in Maryland, U.S. Magistrate Judge Charles Day said 50-year-old Christopher Hasson is entitled to be freed pending trial on firearms and drug charges. But the magistrate didn’t immediately order Hasson’s release.

              On May 7, Day is scheduled to preside over another detention hearing to weigh several proposed release options presented by Hasson's attorney.

              Justice Department prosecutors plan to oppose any conditions for Hasson's release and plan to appeal if Day does order his release. Prosecutors have said he created a hit list of prominent Democrats and network TV journalists. They also say Hasson targeted two Supreme Court justices and two social media company executives, searched online for their home addresses in March 2018, within minutes before and after searching firearm sales websites.

              Day said he still has "grave concerns" about Hasson based on information prosecutors have presented. But the judge noted that Hasson hasn't been charged with any terrorism related offenses since his Feb. 15 arrest.

              Day gave Hasson's defense attorney, Liz Oyer, a few days to arrange conditions of release that would be acceptable to the court. In a letter to Day on Monday, Oyer said Hasson's mother-in-law and father-in-law in Virginia are willing to have him stay with them under their supervision. So would Hasson's parents and brother in Arizona, according to Oyer. Hasson's wife has moved out of a Maryland apartment and is living in Virginia with her mother.

              Oyer said conditions of Hasson's release should include home detention with electronic location monitoring, with no access to firearms, a computer or other internet-capable devices.

              In a February court filing, prosecutors said Hasson is a self-described white nationalist who espoused extremist views for years and "intends to murder innocent civilians on a scale rarely seen in this country." The filing also said Hasson drafted an email in which he said he was "dreaming of a way to kill almost every last person on the earth." And prosecutors said Hasson appeared to be planning attacks inspired by the manifesto of Anders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian right-wing extremist who killed 77 people in a 2011 bomb-and-shooting rampage.

              Oyer said her client hadn't made any direct or specific threats to harm anyone. She said prosecutors are seeking to punish Hasson for "private thoughts" that he never shared.

              "They have not come forward with evidence that Mr. Hasson is a domestic terrorist because he is not," she told Day last week.

              Hasson has pleaded not guilty to charges of illegal possession of firearm silencers, possession of firearms by a drug addict and unlawful user, and possession of a controlled substance. He faces a maximum of 31 years in prison if convicted of all four counts in his indictment.

              Investigators found 15 guns, including seven rifles, and more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition at Hasson's basement apartment in Silver Spring, Maryland, prosecutors said. Hasson's Feb. 27 indictment also accuses him of illegal possession of tramadol, an opioid painkiller.

              Hasson, a former Marine, worked at Coast Guard headquarters in Washington on a program to acquire advanced new cutters for the agency. A Coast Guard spokesman has said Hasson will remain on active duty until the case against him is resolved.


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              • #8
                Judge: Ex-coast guard lieutenant suspected in domestic terror plot to remain in custody

                Judge: Ex-coast guard lieutenant suspected in domestic terror plot to remain in custody

                Prosecutors have said charges filed against defendant Chris Hasson are just "the proverbial tip of the iceberg."

                Once You Get Cuffed & Stuffed and are Anti-ZOG You Ain't Leaving

                LUKE BARNES
                MAY 13, 2019, 6:30 PM



                https://thinkprogress.org/judge-ex-c...-471e17dc579b/
                http://christian-identity.net/forum/...9707#post19707
                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...9707#post19707


                A former coast guard lieutenant and accused white supremacist suspected of plotting attacks on a “hit list” of prominent politicians and journalists is to remain in custody pending trial, a judge ruled at a court hearing in Maryland on Monday.

                The defendant, Chris Hasson, was arrested by federal agents in February on guns and weapons charges. In an earlier motion, prosecutors described those charges as the “proverbial tip of the iceberg.”

                “The defendant is a domestic terrorist,” the document read. “[He is] bent on committing acts dangerous to human life that are intended to affect governmental conduct.”

                Authorities, however, have yet to charge Hasson with charges related to domestic terrorism, which has led defense attorneys to argue that Hasson is not nearly as dangerous as the government claims.

                Federal Judge Charles Day ruled last week that Hasson could be released, provided he was supervised by relatives in Virginia and wore an ankle monitor. Prosecutors appealed the ruling however, and it was overturned Monday by Federal Judge George Hazel.

                “I cannot leave it to a handful of civilians to make sure [Hasson] stands for trial,” Hazel said. “I’ll put that in the hands of the U.S. Marshal’s Service.”

                “Mr. Hasson will get his day in court,” the judge continued. “[But with the evidence] I am not convinced that [pre-trial release] will ensure the safety of the community.”

                The defense has sought to portray Hasson, represented by a public defender and who remained silent during the hearing, as a family man and veteran with no history of violence, despite being in possession of a sizable arsenal.

                Judge Hazel circled back, however, to Hasson’s documented internet history, including repeated searches for the manifesto of Norwegian domestic terrorist Anders Behring Breivik. Hazel noted that Hasson classified his alleged hit list in a similar way that Breivik did before launching twin attacks in 2011 which killed 77 people.

                The judge also flagged language used by Hasson, including “I am dreaming of a way to kill almost every last person on earth.”

                “The fact that additional charges have not been filed does not prevent me from considering [mitigating factors],” Judge Hazel said.

                “Evidence has been provided by the government that the defendant routinely reviewing portions of a manifesto by Anders Breivik, a known domestic terrorist.” Hazel noted that not all of the firearms purchased by Hasson had been recovered.

                It was not immediately known if Hasson would appeal the decision to the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals.


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                • #9
                  Self-proclaimed white nationalist accused of planning mass killing expected to plead guilty

                  Self-proclaimed white nationalist accused of planning mass killing expected to plead guilty

                  Christopher Hasson, a Coast Guard lieutenant, allegedly stockpiled weapons and targeted politicians, journalists.



                  https://www.washingtonpost.com/crime...-plead-guilty/
                  http://christian-identity.net/forum/...0423#post20423
                  http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0423#post20423
                  .

                  Hasson's modest stash as stacked up by ZOG piglice - 2 shotguns, 3 .22 rifles, 3 poodle shooters, one sniper rifle, 6 pistols with ammo
                  .


                  A U.S. Coast Guard lieutenant who authorities say planned to “murder innocent civilians on a scale rarely seen in this country” is expected to appear in federal court Thursday to plead guilty in his case involving guns and drugs, federal records show.

                  Christopher P. Hasson, 50, was arrested in February at his home in Silver Spring, Md., where authorities said they found 15 guns, more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition along with silencers, smoke grenades, and other tactical items that could be used in an attack, as well as 30 bottles of human growth hormone and 100 pills of the opioid Tramadol.

                  The docket for Hasson’s case had a new entry Wednesday: the scheduling of a re-arraignment hearing on Thursday at noon before U.S. District Judge George J. Hazel. Hasson has already been arraigned and pleaded not guilty to the four counts pending against him. No new counts have been filed since then, which would be one reason for a rearraignment.

                  “In general, re-arraignment indicates a change of plea,” said Marcia Murphy, the spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney in Maryland. She declined to comment further on whether Hasson would plead guilty Thursday. No plea is final until it is entered in court and approved by a judge.

                  Liz Oyer, one of the federal public defenders representing Hasson, did not immediately return messages seeking comment. Hasson is being held without bond.

                  Investigators said they found extensive evidence that Hasson had studied and admired the writings of terrorist Anders Breivik, who shot and killed 77 people in Norway in 2011, and who believed that targeted violence was necessary to stop problems caused by immigration. Breivik also advocated six weeks of steroid use before an attack, prosecutors said.

                  Breivik called for targeting political and media leaders, and investigators with the FBI and the Coast Guard Investigative Service found a spreadsheet on Hasson’s computer that listed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Tim Kaine (D-Va.), and television personalities such as Joe Scarborough, Don Lemon and Chris Hayes. The investigators found that Hasson had searched for Scarborough’s home address and in January had Googled “best place in dc to see congress people” and “civil war if trump impeached.”

                  Hasson, who worked in the Coast Guard headquarters in Washington as an acquisitions officer, also apparently wrote a letter to a known American neo-Nazi, according to a prosecution detention motion, which said: “I am a longtime White Nationalist. … I fully support the idea of a White Homeland. … you can make change with a little focused violence.”

                  Hasson was not charged with any terrorism-related counts. Instead, he was indicted on two counts of unlawful possession of silencers, and two counts of possession of a controlled substance. Motions to dismiss those counts, filed by the federal public defender in Maryland, were denied last month by Hazel, and trial was set for later this month.



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                  • #10
                    Coast Guard officer who drafted hit list pleads guilty to drug and weapons charges

                    Coast Guard officer who drafted hit list pleads guilty to drug and weapons charges

                    BY ROBERT LEGARE
                    OCTOBER 3, 2019 / 1:33 PM / CBS NEWS


                    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0432#post20432
                    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...0432#post20432
                    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0432#post20432


                    Greenbelt, Maryland — A Coast Guard lieutenant who prosecutors said compiled a hit list of prominent Democratic leaders and media personalities pleaded guilty to four felony counts of drug and weapons-related charges in federal court here Thursday. He faces up to 31 years in prison.


                    Christopher Hasson, who identified as a "long time White Nationalist" in emails obtained by prosecutors, had initially entered a plea of not guilty, but shifted legal strategy after a series of setbacks in court last month.

                    U.S. District Judge George Hazel accepted the guilty plea in court on Thursday, as Hasson's wife looked on.

                    Hasson, 50, worked as an acquisitions officer and was arrested at Coast Guard headquarters in Washington in February. Investigators said they found 15 firearms, two homemade silencers and more 1,000 rounds of ammunition in his Maryland home, as well as at least 100 pills of the painkiller Tramadol and more than 30 bottles of purported human growth hormone.

                    Inspired by the manifesto of Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik, Hasson spent hours researching the tactics of domestic terrorists, prosecutors said. "I am dreaming of a way to kill almost every last person on earth," he wrote on his computer, saying he would "have to take serious look at appropriate individual targets, to bring the greatest impact."

                    Among the targets on a list found on Hasson's computer were Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, MSNBC anchor Chris Hayes and Democratic Senator Kamala Harris. Prosecutors wrote that the former Marine considered them "traitors."

                    Hasson was not charged with terrorism-related offenses, but his "extremist views" contributed to Hazel's decision to detain him throughout the legal proceedings. Hazel determined in a May detention hearing that the evidence indicated Hasson took "concrete steps" to carry out a violent act.

                    In court Thursday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Windom indicated the government may seek the maximum sentence of up to 31 years in prison at sentencing. Hasson's attorney, Elizabeth Oyer, said she intends to seek a 3.5-year sentence for her client. Hazel set a sentencing date of January 31, 2020.

                    First published on October 3, 2019 / 1:33 PM

                    .

                    Christopher Hasson is depicted in court May 13, 2019.
                    .

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                    • #11
                      Coast Guard Lt. Christopher Hasson sentenced to 13 years in alleged terror plot

                      Coast Guard Lt. Christopher Hasson sentenced to 13 years in alleged terror plot


                      https://www.washingtonpost.com/local...s_alert_revere
                      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...0907#post20907
                      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0907#post20907


                      A Coast Guard officer who kept 15 guns and other weapons in his Maryland home and allegedly planned a killing rampage in support of white nationalism was sentenced Friday to 13 years in federal prison in a case that illustrated the difficulty of prosecuting accused, would-be domestic terrorists who are arrested before they carry out violent crimes.

                      Former lieutenant Christopher P. Hasson, 50, was indicted last year and pleaded guilty to firearms and drug charges. Authorities said he intended to embark on a murderous rampage targeting liberal politicians on Capitol Hill and prominent on-air hosts of cable news programs. Defense lawyers, who wanted Hasson released on probation, argued that he never would have committed the attacks.

                      Whether he ended up in prison, and for how long, depended on a judge’s view of how serious he was about a mass killing. After seven hours of legal arguments and testimony in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt, Md., Judge George E. Hazel sided with prosecutors.

                      “I agree with you that he was going to do these things,” Hazel told Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas P. Windom near the end of the day-long hearing. The government had argued that Hasson deserved to be locked up for a quarter-century.

                      Seated at the defendant’s table in a maroon jail smock, with a short beard and buzz-cut brown hair, Hasson said his addiction to prescription painkillers warped his mental state, causing him to espouse racial hatred and contemplate homicidal mayhem.

                      “I’m embarrassed by these things and ashamed of the pain I caused,” he told the judge in a quiet, even voice. “I’ve never hurt anyone, and I wasn’t planning to in any way, shape or form.”

                      Sentencing memos filed in court by defense lawyers and the U.S. attorney’s office in Maryland gave vastly differing depictions of Hasson, who was a Marine Corps aircraft mechanic in the Persian Gulf War who joined the Coast Guard in 1996 after a stint in the Virginia National Guard.

                      The prosecution cast him as a hate-filled white nationalist meticulously planning a campaign of murder and sabotage that he eventually would have carried out. If not for his arrest last year, “we now would be counting the bodies of the defendant’s victims instead of years of the defendant’s prison time,” Windom wrote.

                      Hasson’s attorneys, however, described a once-stellar and respected career military man unhinged in recent years by opioid abuse, which they said poisoned his tolerance for racial and religious diversity and caused him to fantasize about atrocities he “did not intend to commit.”

                      “His criminal conduct arose out of his addiction,” public defenders Elizabeth G. Oyer and Cullen Macbeth told the judge in writing, arguing Hasson should be released on three years of probation. “He is an asset, not a danger, to our society.”

                      In court Friday, Oyer said, “Even if some of the thoughts and ideas in Mr. Hasson’s head were dark, his heart is not.”

                      Testifying for the defense, forensic psychologist Stephen Hart, who specializes in “violent risk assessment,” said he interviewed Hasson at length, spoke with relatives and acquaintances and reviewed reams of documents, including thousands of pages of evidence, Hasson’s military files and personal records dating to his childhood.

                      “He was not, and is not, a domestic terrorist,” Hart said, arguing that Hasson was lost in violent fantasies. After Hart told the judge, “I would have no concern if he were a neighbor of mine,” Windom said that Hart is not the sort of person who would have to worry for his safety if a heavily armed white nationalist lived next door.

                      “You’re a middle-aged white guy, right?” the prosecutor said in his cross-examination.

                      “Somewhere between middle-aged and old,” Hart replied with a grin.

                      The government’s prosecution of Hasson was complicated by a legal issue that often hampers authorities in such cases: Although investigators have labeled him “a domestic terrorist,” federal law does not list domestic terrorism as a distinct offense with its own penalties the way it defines and sets prison terms for the crime of providing material aid to a foreign terrorist group.

                      When an alleged plotter of domestic terrorism is caught before the act, the menu of applicable federal charges is limited to crimes that are not necessarily terrorism-specific, such as illegal weapons possession. A prosecutor can seek a terrorism-related sentencing enhancement — as Windom did for Hasson — but it requires convincing a judge that the defendant was serious about bringing the plot to fruition.

                      Hazel ruled the former lieutenant was indeed serious.

                      Hasson pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor charge of possessing tramadol, a painkiller, without a prescription; one felony count of possessing firearms while being an illegal narcotics user; and two felony charges of possessing silencers to suppress gunfire noise. Absent his alleged mass-murder scheme, Hasson, a first-time defendant, almost certainly would not get a lengthy sentence for such relatively pedestrian crimes, lawyers say.

                      For months before his Feb. 15 arrest, Hasson, who was assigned to Coast Guard headquarters in Washington, stockpiled guns, bullets, knives, smoke grenades and tactical gear in his Silver Spring, Md., apartment, authorities said. They said he immersed himself in bombmaking and sniper manuals, racist and anti-Semitic manifestos and the right-wing ravings of Norwegian extremist Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 in the Oslo area in a 2011 bombing and shooting rampage.

                      In his voluminous statement of beliefs, Breivik, now imprisoned, urged like-minded would-be assailants to engage in careful, long-term preparations, amassing equipment and targeting left-leaning political and media figures for death. He suggested steroid injections in the weeks before killing people and other drug use to enhance stamina and pain tolerance during an attack.

                      Prosecutors said Hasson had 30 vials of a human growth hormone and five vials of testosterone, among other steroids. In recent years, authorities said, he had purchased thousands of opioid tramadol pills on the Internet.

                      Hasson came under investigation after software used by the Coast Guard to identify internal threats flagged suspicious activity on his work computer. His Web searches at home and work showed he had been contemplating not only mass shootings but sabotage and other forms of mayhem, such as poisoning food supplies and releasing biological toxins, authorities said. They said he created a spreadsheet with references to targets, including prominent Democrats in Congress and hosts of MSNBC and CNN news programs.

                      “Please send me your violence that I may unleash it unto their heads,” he wrote in a long memo to himself. “Guide my hate to make a lasting impression on this world.”




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