Veltman may have visited neo-Nazi sites: document. London terror attack suspect Nathaniel Veltman may have visited white supremacist websites over the dark web, court documents suggest. New court documents revealed to media that the 20-year-old man accused of killing a Muslim family in London, Ont., had what appeared to be “hate related material” on a device and may have consumed white supremacist content on the dark web. Nathaniel Veltman was charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder in the aftermath of a vehicle-ramming attack that killed three generations of a family that was out for a walk on June 6, 2021. Roughly a week after the initial charges were laid, prosecutors also laid terrorism charges against Veltman. The victims were identified as 46-year-old Salman Afzaal, his wife Madiha, 44, their 15-year-old daughter Yumnah and Salman’s 74-year-old mother, Talat. Nine-year-old Fazey Afzaal survived the attack and was hospitalized with serious injuries. (…) Most of the details of the files that were found on the devices remain under a publication ban, but police noted that some of the documents on one of Veltman’s devices “appeared to be hate related material and relevant to the listed offences.” Investigators also sought access to several of Veltman’s online accounts, such as Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Snapchat. Around 68 usernames and passwords for various online accounts were stored on the laptop. Several weapons were also included in the ITO’s list of items to be searched for, including a machete, a camouflage pocketknife, a large serrated knife, an airsoft gun, and an axe. In Veltman’s apartment, police said they found another lined piece of paper with speeds and percentages seized from a kitchen table. The ITOs also shed some light into Veltman’s past. Investigators indicated that he was not known to the RCMP at the time of his arrest. Police also said Veltman was homeschooled until Grade 10 and had few friends.
Bozeman sidesteps new state law, adopts Pride flag
After more than five hours of debate, the city commission voted 4-1 to designate the flag as an official flag of Bozeman. Members of Bozeman’s queer community and their allies gather just after midnight on Read more…