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Leaked Chats, Documents Show Atomwaffen Founder's Path to Terror Plot

Leaked chats, documents and online materials have revealed that Atomwaffen Division (AWD) founder Brandon Clint Russell was secretly but tirelessly active as a white-power propagandist and organizer between his release from prison in 2021 and his arrest on charges of plotting terror attacks.

The materials show Russell, 27, of Orlando, Florida, encouraging others to commit similar crimes to those he is now accused of, and advocating armed attacks on electricity, water and transport infrastructure.

Like other white-power accelerationists, Russell promoted the strategy of attacking public infrastructure in the belief that it would trigger a crisis that would cause the collapse of 鈥淭he System鈥 鈥 a term that accelerationists use for the status quo political order.

The new charges were outlined in the criminal complaint filed by the FBI on Feb. 2 and unsealed on Feb. 6. The complaint accuses Russell and Sarah Beth Clendaniel 鈥 his alleged accomplice and apparent girlfriend 鈥 of planning and equipping themselves for attacks on electricity infrastructure in Maryland.

Their trial on these charges is ongoing in Maryland鈥檚 federal court.

Russell鈥檚 aim was a 鈥渃ascading failure costing billions of dollars鈥 that might deprive Baltimore of electricity for months, according to the complaint.

While the document cites two encrypted chat platforms that Russell and Clendaniel allegedly used, it does not touch on Russell鈥檚 broader efforts to further radicalize other white-power activists and spur them on to violent, terroristic acts.

Hatewatch can reveal that these efforts took place across several fronts: Russell was an inflammatory presence in encrypted chats where he networked with like-minded extremists, and he circulated lavishly designed PDF publications that promoted the same ideology that fueled AWD. Russell was also an author and promoter of a website called 鈥淎merican Futurist,鈥 where he and other former members of AWD targeted federal agents under the guise of investigative journalism.

The materials reveal more about Russell鈥檚 post-prison trajectory, show the inner workings of the remnants of the so-called 鈥淭errorgram鈥 milieu, and raise questions about the efficacy of incarceration as a response to white-power extremism.

They also give substance to official concerns about extremists鈥 focus on infrastructure following a spate of recent substation attacks.

Current charges

A criminal complaint alleges that Russell had been plotting since at latest mid-2022 to carry out attacks on the electricity grid.

The complaint relies extensively on a 鈥渃onfidential human source鈥 identified pseudonymously as 鈥淐HS-1.鈥 The complaint alleges that in conversations on an 鈥渆ncrypted communication application鈥 with CHS-1, Russell used the pseudonyms 鈥淗omunculus鈥 and 鈥淩accoon.鈥

According to the complaint, Russell 鈥渆ncouraged CHS-1 to carry out attacks against critical infrastructure鈥 in furtherance of his 鈥渞acially motivated violent extremist鈥 ideology. The encouragement included sharing a fourteen-page 鈥渨hite supremacist publication that provided instructions on how to attack critical infrastructure.鈥

Russell repeatedly discussed attacking power infrastructure with CHS-1 throughout late 2022, according to the complaint. In late December, he introduced the informant to 鈥渟omeone else i know in Maryland [who] is gonna be doing same thing as you,鈥 and said that coordination of attacks would 鈥淕REATLY amplify its effects,鈥 according to the complaint.

Subsequently, on Jan. 12, a user who went by the handle 鈥淣ythra88鈥 introduced herself to CHS-1 on the same communication platform. The complaint identified Clendaniel as the person behind the pseudonym. The document goes on to note that she asked the informant to purchase high-powered weapons and made detailed plans in consultation with Russell for her and CHS-1 to attack five power stations in Maryland.

The complaint states that Clendaniel told CHS-1 that she was terminally ill. By carrying out the attacks, she allegedly told CHS-1 that she hoped to 鈥渁ccomplish something worthwhile鈥 before her death.

Hatewatch contacted the FBI for comment on this reporting but did not receive a response in time for publication.

Hatewatch also telephoned and emailed Kobie Flowers, who is listed as Russell鈥檚 attorney in court documents, and the public defender listed as Clendaniel鈥檚 representative for comment on his activities, but neither responded in time for publication.

Russell鈥檚 three pseudonyms in three leaked chat archives

While the complaint offers a glimpse of Russell鈥檚 recent activities, it does not identify the platform or the publication he allegedly gave the informant, or his broader activities.

Leaked archives from three private Telegram groups, however, provide a fuller picture of his tireless activities as a white-power propagandist and agitator.

The chats were obtained and provided to Hatewatch by the White Rose Society, an Australian antifascist research collective. The three chats 鈥 titled 鈥淔reedom Club,鈥 鈥淐at Enjoyers Anonymous,鈥 and 鈥淒on鈥檛 Do Anything Illegal鈥 鈥 altogether span the period from July 10, 2022, to Nov. 9, 2022.

While the criminal complaint identifies Russell with the pseudonyms 鈥淗omunculus鈥 and 鈥淩accoon,鈥 Hatewatch has identified another Russell pseudonym in the chats.

On Aug. 24, 2022, in the 鈥淔reedom Club鈥 chat, a user posting under the pseudonym 鈥淛C鈥 asked 鈥渄o you know what happened to Hommunculus [sic]?鈥

A user posting under the name 鈥淥uroborus鈥 [sic], responded 鈥渢hat is me鈥 around 20 minutes later, adding, 鈥淚 keep getting banned.鈥

Hatewatch was able to corroborate this by cross-referencing activity under the three usernames across the three chats. On several occasions, the 鈥淥uroborus鈥 and 鈥淩accoon鈥 pseudonyms circulated identical links and documents across separate chats, adding similar comments, and posting on the same day and at roughly the same time.

A White Rose member, to whom Hatewatch has granted anonymity for their personal safety, said in an online chat that they first noticed the user 鈥淗omunculus鈥 on June 2, 2022, in a fourth, separate Telegram chat associated with an Australian extremist group. At that time Russell, as 鈥淗omunculus,鈥 forwarded a 14-page document entitled 鈥淢ake It Count鈥 from a private channel, Right Wing Book Club, that distributes material glorifying mass murderers and white supremacist terrorists.

Advocating terrorism, violence, infrastructure attacks

If Russell did indeed adopt these other pseudonyms as evidence suggests, then in the leaked chats, he repeatedly promoted terrorist attacks on infrastructure as a necessary element of white-power ideology.

On July 16, 2022, for example, 鈥淥uroborus鈥 shared material on the theme of attacking railways in the 鈥淒on鈥檛 Do Anything Illegal鈥 chat,

At that time, U.S. rail transport was affected by . In one post, 鈥淥uroborus鈥 posted a link to story from the previous day on the junk-news site Natural News, which claimed all railroad traffic could be halted by the strike. In a post minutes later, 鈥淥uroborus鈥 added, 鈥淧erfect time to fuck with the rails,鈥 and then asked, 鈥測ou guys ever see the episode of unsolved mysteries about the 1995 derailing of the Amtrak.鈥

罢丑别听 of television show 鈥淯nsolved Mysteries鈥 Russell referred to covers the 1995 unsolved sabotage of Amtrak鈥檚 鈥淪unset Limited鈥 service near Palo Verde, Arizona, which killed one Amtrak employee and injured scores of passengers. The saboteurs were never identified, but the FBI recovered notes that claimed responsibility in the names of the 鈥淪ons of the Gestapo,鈥 and attacked federal agencies over their handling of the 1993 siege at the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas.

Later on July 16, in the same chat, 鈥淥uroborus鈥 forwarded a post from American Futurist, a neo-Nazi propaganda site maintained by former AWD chapter leader Jack Espinoza. At the time of reporting, American Futurist still listed Russell as a contributor.

The caption on the American Futurist post read 鈥減retty cool maps鈥 and included links to 鈥溾 and 鈥.鈥 Both sites are based on Open Street Maps and show the locations of various infrastructure networks. The criminal complaint alleges that Sarah Clendaniel twice sent the same sites to the FBI鈥檚 confidential informant.

鈥淎merican Futurist鈥 denied knowledge of Russell鈥檚 alleged plot in a Telegram post last Saturday. However, following previous attacks on power stations, the publication has itself shared links to the same sites Russell is accused of sharing with the FBI鈥檚 confidential informant.

Hatewatch reached out to American Futurist over an email listed on their website鈥檚 contact page but received no response.

In a Dec. 4, 2022, blog post about a substation attack in North Carolina, a pseudonymous contributor shared a link to 鈥淥pen Infrastructure Maps,鈥 claiming, 鈥淭he attacker probably used something like鈥 the site. In a Sept. 2, 2022, post, American Futurist editor-in-chief 鈥淭im Turtle鈥 referred to infrastructure as 鈥渙ne of the prime targets鈥 for prospective white supremacist revolutionaries.

Again under the 鈥淥uroborus鈥 pseudonym, Russell apparently shared links to the same sites in the 鈥淔reedom Club鈥 chat on July 23, 2022. An hour later, he forwarded a propaganda video showing explosions, fires, and riots from a private Telegram channel. The post included the caption, 鈥淭HERE IS NO MORE FREE SPEECH/NOW IS TIME FOR IRL ACTION.鈥

A caption in the video also reads, 鈥淭he West is at its limits. Why don鈥檛 you give it a little push? Your time is now. Terror spreads like butter.鈥

鈥淥uroborus鈥 also shared content particularly referencing power substations.

On July 24, 2022, he forwarded a post from a channel called 鈥淭ERROR鈥 to 鈥淔reedom Club鈥 featuring what appears to be a power substation on fire.

That post included the caption: 鈥淣o matter how bad it gets, as long as the modern man has his TV and his paycheck things will never change. [Dynamite emoji] Therefore the only solution is to take these things from him. [REDACT] your local power substation. [REDACT] your local railway. [REDACT] your local amazon center. [REDACT] your local grocery store.鈥 (The [REDACT] was not Hatewatch鈥檚 addition 鈥 it appeared in the original text.

White-power extremists use devices like the term 鈥淸REDACT]鈥 on Telegram and other platforms to reference and advocate violent actions while retaining plausible deniability.

Targeting nonprofits and federal agents

In the chats, also under the 鈥淥uroborus鈥 pseudonym, Russell attempted to direct hostile attention at perceived enemies of the white-power movement, spreading the private information of hundreds of employees of a human rights nonprofit, and promoting website articles that claimed to identify undercover FBI officers.

On July 20, 2022, 鈥淥uroborus鈥 joined a chat and immediately asked, 鈥淒id you guys see [the] leak?鈥 and named the human-rights organization. He then made two more posts: one with a screenshot of the nonprofit鈥檚 president鈥檚 supposed contact information, and one appending a CSV document supposedly containing all of the nonprofit鈥檚 employees鈥 contact details.

鈥淩accoon鈥 forwarded the same information to a different neo-Nazi chat that day, with the caption, 鈥渟pread EVERYWHERE.鈥

Later, on Aug. 16, 2022, 鈥淥uroborus鈥 expressed frustration that white-power activists weren鈥檛 taking more action based on the non-profit leak, asking another chat, 鈥淲hy does it seem like everyone completely forgot ablut [sic] the鈥 dox leak?鈥

鈥淥uroborus鈥 also worked hard to make others aware of a supposed identification of an undercover federal agent who he claimed had infiltrated AWD.

On Aug. 20, 2022, 鈥淥uroborus鈥 asked members of a chat if they had seen 鈥渉ow that undercover fbi agent was exposed.鈥 The comment apparently refers to an Aug. 16, 2022, post on 鈥淎merican Futurist,鈥 that claimed to reveal an undercover FBI agent who had joined the group.

The author of the Aug. 16, blog is 鈥淩yan Arthur,鈥 a pseudonym used by ex-AWD chapter leader, Ryan Hatfield, who joined the organization at the age of 16.

After asking the room if they had seen the post, 鈥淥uroborus鈥 encouraged another user to archive the images and 鈥渟pread [them] around.鈥

Hatewatch attempted to contact Hatfield through an account on the encrypted messaging app Wire that is tied to his group, the National Socialist Resistance Front, but received no response.

'Make it Count' offers blueprint for terror

Although the complaint does not identify the 14-page 鈥渨hite supremacist publication that provided instructions on how to attack critical infrastructure,鈥 which Russell allegedly gave the FBI鈥檚 confidential informant, the chats show users under handles who Hatewatch believes to be Russell, circulating a PDF matching that description.

鈥淢ake it Count鈥 presents a series of exhortations to terrorist acts interspersed with garish or grisly images, mirroring the hyper-stylized, neo-Nazi aesthetic popularized by AWD鈥檚 propaganda. A preface urges care in choosing targets for violence by apparent reference to the then-recent mass shooting in Buffalo, New York. 鈥淲hile you can shoot a grocery store full of [n-word]s, you are treating the symptoms of the cancer, not the cause,鈥 adding 鈥測ou must select targets that do the most damage to the system and spark revolution and chaos.鈥

The preface spells out a version of accelerationist ideology, claiming that 鈥渃ollapse of the current system is the only means of saving our white race.鈥 Later, the treatise blames 鈥渢echnological society鈥 for facilitating the demise of white people, adding, 鈥渟o long as the power turns on, the status quo, the downward decline of our race, and the increase in nonwhites in our lands will carry on unhindered.鈥

Later, the document says, 鈥淭he main thing that keeps the anti-white system going is the powergrid [sic].鈥 It says attacking electricity infrastructure is 鈥渆asier than you think,鈥 that 鈥減ower distribution substations are peppered all over the country,鈥 and that these are 鈥渟itting ducks. Easy prey.鈥

The rest of the document is not a continuous narrative but a series of one-page, graphics-heavy incitements to acts of violence 鈥 including misogyny-driven murder, urban sniper attacks, and the assassination of Jewish people.

In the middle of the document, however, three running pages encourage infrastructure attacks on the electricity grid, cellphone towers and satellite communications. On the page addressing electricity infrastructure, readers are instructed to 鈥淟OCATE SUBSTATION. RANGE FIND. SHOOT TRANSFORMERS. FLEE UNDETECTED.鈥

Infrastructure attacks plotted and executed

The instructions in 鈥淢ake it Count鈥 and other 鈥淭errorgram鈥 publications resemble the plot that Russell and Clendaniel are accused of attempting to execute.

The publication and distribution of these texts, which explicitly exhort white-power accelerationists to target infrastructure, aligns with a sharp increase in attacks on electricity substations.

The U.S. Department of Energy publishes annual statistics on interruptions to the electricity supply around the country, along with their causes, based on reports submitted to them by utility suppliers.

There were 163 human-caused interruptions in 2022 鈥 whether due to physical attacks, vandalism, threats, or cybersecurity incidents. This was a 277% increase on the 2018 figure of 51 human-caused interruptions. Though attacks rose steadily in the interim, the 2022 figure is almost double 2019's 81 attacks, and around 170% higher than either 2020 (96 human caused interruptions) and 2021 (97).

It is not possible to tie all these attacks and threats to white-power accelerationists, but recent court cases and indictments indicate that some of its proponents have acted on movement propaganda, just as Russell is accused of doing.

In 2021, four habitu茅s of Iron March 鈥 a now-defunct white-power forum and a direct antecedent of AWD聽鈥 were charged with an alleged 2019 plot to destroy a power station with explosives. In 2022, three men pleaded guilty to assisting with a plot to destroy power stations around the country, which they worked on as a long-term project between 2017 and 2020.

Both plots were allegedly aimed at triggering civil unrest to trigger a crisis in 鈥淭he System,鈥 as per the accelerationist blueprint.

PDFs show persistence of 'accelerationist' ideology in white-power movement

鈥淢ake it Count鈥澛爄s one of a series of four similar documents published since 2021 that are associated with the 鈥淭errorgram鈥 milieu. In the leaked chats, 鈥淥uroborus鈥澛爎epeatedly circulates all four documents to others. All promote white-power accelerationism as an ideology, advocate terrorism and violence, celebrate white nationalist mass shooters, and canonize pseudonymous white-power Telegram influencers.

Like 鈥淢ake it Count,鈥 the other PDFs 鈥 entitled 鈥淭he Hard Reset,鈥澛犫淢ilitant Accelerationism,鈥 and 鈥淒o it For the 'Gram鈥 鈥 are all addressed to the white-power movement, and each from a slightly different perspective urges members to embrace more radical ideas and more violent methods.

Unlike 鈥淢ake it Count,鈥澛爀ach of the other three is a compilation of short pieces by pseudonymous authors, with much of the content excerpted from now-defunct Telegram accounts or channels. 鈥淢ake it Count鈥 appears to be written in a single authorial voice. None of the authors have so far been identified.

All of the PDFs appeared after an initial wave of bans on 鈥淭errorgram鈥 channels that followed the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. According to a from German nonprofit Center for Monitoring, Analysis, and Strategy (CeMAS), 鈥淢ilitant Accelerationism鈥 was published on June 16, 2021; 鈥淒o it For the 'Gram鈥澛爋n Dec. 16, 2021; and 鈥淭he Hard Reset鈥 on June 14, 2022. According to the Terrorism Research and Analysis Consortium, 鈥淢ake it Count鈥 was published on the same day as 鈥淭he Hard Reset.鈥

All the PDFs appeared after an initial wave of bans on 鈥淭errorgram鈥 channels that followed the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. In a telephone conversation, Miro Dittrich from the German nonprofit Center for Monitoring, Analysis, and Strategy (CeMAS) told Hatewatch that 鈥淢ilitant Accelerationism鈥 was published on June 16, 2021; 鈥淒o it For the 'Gram鈥 on Dec. 16, 2021; "Make it Count" on June 1, 2022; and 鈥淭he Hard Reset鈥 on July 14, 2022.聽

According to an 聽of 鈥淭he Hard Reset,鈥 47 of its 261 pages, or around 17% of the document鈥檚 content, are devoted to encouraging attacks on infrastructure.

Russell's prior incarceration

Russell鈥檚 prior imprisonment has done little to soften his allegiance to the white-power movement.

That period of incarceration followed Russell鈥檚 arrest in 2017, after police discovered bomb-making equipment in the home he shared with another AWD co-founder Devon Arthurs.

The discovery came during an investigation into the killings of AWD members Jeremy Himmelman and Andrew Oneschuk. (Arthurs, who is accused of murdering Himmelman and Oneschuk, has yet to face trial.) Russell was subsequently sentenced to five years in federal prison in 2018 for the explosives-related charges. He left prison and entered supervised release in June 2021.

While in prison, however, he remained in close touch with others in his movement, and even produced and published white-power propaganda.

Separate archives of an internal AWD chat obtained by Hatewatch 鈥 spanning the period from summer 2017 to early 2018 鈥 show several members, including Russell鈥檚 successor as leader of AWD, claiming to be in frequent contact with him.

Hatewatch also found that Russell released neo-Nazi propaganda while in the United States Penitentiary in Atlanta on at least two occasions 鈥 once in 2018, when AWD members published a video targeting figures who Russell perceived were disloyal to the group, and again in 2020, when 鈥淎merican Futurist,鈥 the AWD-tied neo-Nazi propaganda site, published a series of short 鈥減rison essays.鈥

In the essays, which were published in May 2020, Russell refers to the white-power movement as 鈥渙ur movement.鈥 He also explains a prison tattoo featuring AWD鈥檚 logo, a shield with a nuclear power symbol in the middle, alongside the tagline 鈥淩EMEMBER OUR MARTYRS,鈥 with the names of three deceased AWD members.

Russell later 聽of the tattoo on Twitter after his release.

Cynthia Miller-Idriss is the founder of American University鈥檚 Polarization and Extremism Research and Innovation Lab, which studies violence prevention and radicalization.

In a telephone conversation, she told Hatewatch that Russell鈥檚 case exemplifies the shortcomings of combatting violent extremism through retributive and punitive measures.

鈥淭he American prison system isn鈥檛 set up to rehabilitate anybody,鈥 Miller-Idriss said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a system that鈥檚 set up to punish people.鈥

For someone like Russell, who described 鈥減rison or death ... [as] inevitable鈥 in one 2020 prison essay, prison can offer a 鈥渢ime to plan,鈥 she added.

鈥淓ven in the best-case scenario, you arrest these guys. You send them away,鈥 Miller-Idriss said. 鈥淭hey come out a few years later, and they鈥檙e right back at it. It isn鈥檛 a sustainable solution. It isn鈥檛 a solution that actually intervenes, or that prevents anything in the long-term."

Atomwaffen and a legacy of 'accelerationism'

From its founding in 2015, AWD set the tone for other groups in the 鈥accelerationist鈥澛爓ing of the white supremacist movement.

Other groups that followed in AWD鈥檚 wake include Sonnenkrieg Division, 聽and The Base.

Many of these groups involved very young people, almost exclusively men and boys. The Estonian leader of Feuerkrieg Division, for example, was 13 years old聽 by that country鈥檚 security services in 2020.

The activities of these organized, centralized accelerationist groups peaked before 2020. Within the past three years, they have been disrupted by arrests and trials; the identification of leaders and members by reporters, antifascists, and researchers; and losing access to the online platforms they once used for propaganda and organization.

As a result, white-power accelerationists migrated to loose, decentralized online communities聽in late 2019, including a shifting network of channels on low-moderation encrypted messaging application, Telegram. This Telegram channel network is known as 鈥淭errorgram.鈥

鈥淭errorgram鈥 glorified extreme, racist violence, referring to white supremacist terrorists as 鈥渟aints,鈥 proliferating bomb and 3D-printing weapons-making materials, and encouraging others to take up arms.

Telegram began systematically banning 鈥淭errorgram鈥 channels in 2021, following the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

But in the face of these bans, white-power accelerationists have found ways to spread their propaganda to a dedicated group of supporters through private chats and channels. Though the numbers of people involved in accelerationist groups may be fewer than at the movement鈥檚 peak, Russell鈥檚 case demonstrates their sustained appetite for violence.

鈥淲e should be primarily focused on bringing the system down,鈥 Russell wrote on July 2, 2022, in the 鈥淒on鈥檛 Do Anything Illegal鈥 chat, one of the private communities he was a part of.

鈥淕ood thing the younger crowd loves us accelerationists,鈥 Russell added.

Photo from Twitter

Editor鈥檚 note: The 人兽性交鈥檚 Intelligence Project, which produces Hatewatch, also partners with PERIL to develop resources that equip parents, caregivers, educators and other trusted adults with the tools to prevent the spread of harmful ideologies and narratives. Hannah Gais and Jason Wilson, who reported this story, are not directly involved in the PERIL partnership. If you are interested in the Parents and Caregivers Guide 人兽性交 produced with PERIL, you can find it here.

An earlier version of this article offered incorrect publication dates for the Terrorgram documents Make it Count and The Hard Reset. The incorrect dates were derived from errors in source documents. Hatewatch regrets the error.

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