Police swooped in an carried out two raids following an alleged plot to kidnap Anthony Albanese was discussed in a far-right online forum. A far-right group of neo-Nazis allegedly threatened to kidnap Australia’s Prime Minister after the Bondi Beach terror attack, horror group chat messages revealed. Two police raids were launched when supposed plans to take Anthony Albanese and plant bombs in mosques were leaked. One recording, from a chilling online chatroom, appeared to show a man being offered £5000 ($10,000 AUD) to rent a van and kidnap Albanese so his government could be replaced with a new “nationalist” regime. The internet group, which was filled with far-right users, was set up by the organisers of a white nationalist protest against apparent mass immigration to Australia, called March for Australia. Leaked messages, from the Discord group, reportedly showed one person, who went by the username “cav” suggesting the horrific plot to the sick group, according to the Sydney Morning Herald. He wrote: “I genuinely believe the best option is to is literally to fing grab him [Albanese] and put him in a room and force him to answer like every possible fing question.” When asked if he was “actually going to do it” by another member, cav added: “I would, yeah. And if anyone wants to … like rent the van and help fing come grab him with me. Like, yeah, let’s go.” Another person in the forum appeared to offer cav £5,000 ($10,000 AUD) to carry out the terrifying plan, according to leaked messages. In another chilling message, cav wrote: “I’ve crossed into the fing realm of terrorism, bro.… The only way I would take power is through force.” (…) Police arrested plumber Nathan Ballesty, 27, following a separate investigation on a different social media post about allegedly kidnapping the Prime Minister. Police did not reveal whether these two cases were related or whether he was a member of the Discord group. The plumber has been photographed with neo-Nazis at events and is an associate of a neo-Nazi group called the National Socialist Network.
via mirror: Horror £5000 neo-Nazi plot to kidnap Australia’s PM exposed in chilling messages
siehe auch: Shock as $10,000 plot to kidnap Anthony Albanese is exposed after secret messages are leaked from neo-Nazi group chat Kidnapping plot exposed in leaked messages Man offered $10,000 to kidnap Anthony Albanese. A plot to kidnap Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in the hours after the Bondi Beach attack has been uncovered after secret texts were leaked from a group chat. The plan involved a man being offered $10,000 to rent a van and kidnap Albanese so a new ‘nationalist’ regime could be installed. The threat came from far-right associates of neo-Nazis within an online chat room on Discord run by March for Australia organisers, the Sydney Morning Herald reported. One man, who who went by the username ‘Cav’, said he believed there were enough members of the National Socialist Network (NSN) who could carry out the plot. The NSN was disbanded on January 18 ahead of new hate speech laws being introduced. Daily Mail does not suggest its leader Thomas Sewell was involved in the kidnapping plot. ‘I genuinely believe the best option is to is literally to fing grab him [Albanese] and put him in a room and force him to answer like every possible fing question,’ Cav said. ‘Yes, but are you actually going to do it?’ another user asked. ‘I would, yeah,’ Cav replied. ‘And if anyone wants to … like rent the van and help f***ing come grab him with me. Like, yeah, let’s go.’; Secret chats reveal $10,000 plot to kidnap PM as police raid neo-Nazi associates. In the hours after the Bondi terror attack, far-right associates of neo-Nazis threatened to kidnap the prime minister and send bombs to mosques through the post, prompting two separate police raids. This masthead was leaked the apparent threats, including a recording of a man being offered $10,000 to rent a van and kidnap Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, from within an online chat room run by March for Australia organisers and filled with neo-Nazis in the lead-up to Monday’s anti-immigration rallies. Days after the kidnap plot was discussed online, detectives swooped on a neo-Nazi associate at his Sydney home over a separate social media post, which also allegedly called for Albanese’s abduction. Police are investigating, and they did not say if the cases are believed to be related.
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