mardi 13 novembre 2018

Man arrested on weapons charges revered synagogue shooter, prepared for "race war"

According to relatives, he referred to mass-shooter Robert Bowers as a "hero"

Quote:

That’s according to court records on Jeffrey R. Clark, who resides in the Bloomingdale neighborhood.

Clark appeared in U.S. Court in D.C. on Tuesday where he was ordered held without bond. He faces two charges: one federal count of unlawful possession of firearms by a person who is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance and one District of Columbia count of possessing high-capacity magazines.

The Washington Post first reported on Clark’s arrest.

According to court documents, Clark was linked via social media to Robert Bowers, the man accused of killing 11 people inside a Pittsburgh synagogue in October, on the network Gab.

Relatives alerted authorities to Clark after the death by suicide of his brother, 23-year-old Edward “Teddy” Clark. Charging documents say Edward Clark killed himself on Roosevelt Island, on October 27, within hours of the deadly Pittsburgh massacre. Police recovered multiple rounds of ammunition at the scene. He did not leave a suicide note.

Relatives told investigators that Jeffrey and Edward Clark were involved in the “alt-right” movement and told them about the brothers’ connection to Gab and the Pittsburgh shooter.

After Edwards death, documents say Jeffrey Clark became more outspoken and “agitated” about his views, defending Bowers and telling relatives that he and his brother fantasized about killing “Jews and blacks,” documents say.

That’s when relatives called police out of concern and two relatives went to Clark’s house to confiscate his firearms. Investigators say of the four boxes Clark gave relatives, none contained firearms, but they did contain unregistered weapon pieces. Investigators wrote that these parts can be used to modify assault weapons.

Relatives would later tell investigators that the brothers had attended the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville and believed they were pictured next to the man who allegedly drove a car into a crowd of protesters, killing one woman.

They also told investigators the brothers believed in a “race revolution,” that they wanted to take part in.

Later, Jeffrey Clark told relatives that the Pittsburgh victims “deserved it,” the documents say.

In another chilling detail in the charging documents: Relatives told investigators that they believed Edward Clark intended to commit an act of violence on the day he died as he had additional ammunition.

Upon his arrest, Clark told FBI agents that he and his brother purchased the firearms because they believed there would be a “civil war,” documents say.
The relatives who turned this man in are national heroes, quite honestly. We'll never know how many lives they saved; but there's little doubt in my mind they did so.

Sadly relief is tempered by the knowledge that there are more people like this out there, buying guns and ammunition and becoming angrier and angrier about a fairy-tale story they've been sold.


via International Skeptics Forum https://ift.tt/2B5EtQc

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