Three men linked to 'boogaloo' movement are arrested on terrorism charges after 'plotting to incite violence with Molotov cocktails' at George Floyd protests in Las Vegas
Three Nevada men with ties to a loose movement of right-wing extremists advocating the overthrow of the US government are facing terrorism-related charges in what authorities say was a conspiracy to spark violence during recent protests in Las Vegas.
Stephen T Parshall, 35, Andrew Lynam, 23, and William L Loomis, 40, were arrested Saturday on the way to a protest in downtown Las Vegas after filling gas cans at a parking lot and making Molotov cocktails in glass bottles, according to a criminal complaint.
Federal prosecutors say the three white men with US military experience are accused of conspiring to carry out a plan that began in April in conjunction with protests to reopen businesses closed because of the coronavirus.
More recently, they sought to capitalize on protests over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in Minneapolis after a white officer pressed his knee into his neck for several minutes even after he stopped moving and pleading for air, prosecutors said.
'People have a right to peacefully protest. These men are agitators and instigators. Their point was to hijack the protests into violence,' Nicholas Trutanich, US attorney in Nevada, told the Associated Press. He referred to what he called 'real and legitimate outrage' over Floyd's death.
The complaint filed in US District Court in Las Vegas on Wednesday said they self-identified as part of the 'boogaloo' movement, which prosecutors said in the document is 'a term used by extremists to signify coming civil war and/or fall of civilization'.
Three Nevada men with ties to a loose movement of right-wing extremists advocating the overthrow of the US government are facing terrorism-related charges in what authorities say was a conspiracy to spark violence during George Floyd protests in Las Vegas (pictured)
The suspects - Stephen T Parshall, Andrew Lynam and William L Loomis - were arrested Saturday on the way to a protest in downtown Las Vegas after filling gas cans at a parking lot and making Molotov cocktails in glass bottles, according to a criminal complaint. Authorities released the photo above of the Molotov cocktails
The three suspects were each being held on $1million bond each in the Clark County jail Wednesday, according to court records.
The complaint said Lynam is an Army reservist, with Parshall formerly enlisted in the Navy and Loomis formerly enlisted in the Air Force.
Each currently faces two federal charges - conspiracy to damage and destroy by fire and explosive, and possession of unregistered firearms.
In state court, they've been accused of felony conspiracy, terrorism and explosives possession. Trutanich said they'll be prosecuted in both jurisdictions.
'This type of planning and intent on causing mayhem is terroristic and will not be tolerated,' said Steve Wolfson, the district attorney in Las Vegas.
Attorney Monti Levy, representing Loomis, declined to comment about the state case and did not immediately respond to a question about whether she'll represent Loomis in federal court.
A deputy public defender representing Parshall declined to comment and an attorney appointed to represent Lynam did not immediately respond to messages.
Prosecutors said Parshall, Lynam and Loomis sought to capitalize on protests over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in Minneapolis after a white officer pressed his knee into his neck for several minutes during an arrest last week. Police are seen patrolling the streets of Las Vegas after deploying tear gas to clear crowds on May 30
A confidential informant met Lynam and Parshall at an early April rally in Las Vegas calling for the reopening of the state's economy, the federal complaint said.
The men were carrying firearms and Lynam said the group 'was not for joking around and that it was for people who wanted to violently overthrow the United States government', according to the complaint.
The informant said that during a May 27 meeting, Parshall and Loomis 'discussed causing an incident to incite chaos and possibly a riot, in response to the death of a suspect,' a reference to Floyd.
Loomis stated he wanted to firebomb a power substation, according to the informant in the criminal complaint.
But on May 28, Lynam instructed the group to observe the riots occurring nationwide and use that momentum as a driving force to possibly take action against a fee station at Lake Mead on federal land north of the Hoover Dam, on May 30.
Other targets discussed included a US Forest Service ranger station, the complaint said.
The informant stated that Loomis and Parshall's 'idea behind the explosion was to hopefully create civil unrest and rioting throughout Las Vegas'.
They wanted to use the momentum from riots occurring nationwide because of Floyd's death 'to hopefully stir enough confusion and excitement, that others see the explosions and police presence and begin to riot in the streets out of anger,' the complaint said.
On May 28-29, FBI agents observed Parshall buy fireworks at a tribal travel plaza, and he indicated to the informant that he had glass bottles, rags and gasoline Molotov cocktails, the complaint said.
On May 30, all three and the informant agreed to take part in the Black Lives Matter protest in downtown Las Vegas, the complaint said.
The charges come as intelligence officials are warning that 'violent opportunists' have been emboldened nationwide by attacks on law enforcement officials amid protests.
In a Tuesday internal intelligence assessment, US Department of Homeland Security officials warned 'this could lead to an increase in potentially lethal engagements with law enforcement officials as violent opportunists increasingly infiltrate ongoing protest activity'.
AP obtained a copy of the document, which cites the shooting of a Las Vegas police officer during protests, and two other officers shooting a heavily armed man at a nearby federal courthouse.
'Law enforcement officers continue to be the primary targets of firearm attacks, though several incidents last night involved violent opportunists shooting into crowds of protesters,' the assessment states.
What is the 'boogaloo' movement?
Three men linked to 'boogaloo' movement are arrested on terrorism charges after 'plotting to incite violence with Molotov cocktails' at George Floyd protests in Las Vegas
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June 04, 2020
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