Berliner Polizist erschießt 33-Jährige bei Einsatz

Bei einem Einsatz in Berlin-Friedrichshain hat ein Polizeibeamter eine Frau erschossen. Die Polizei wurde alarmiert, weil die 33-Jährige ihren Mitbewohner bedroht haben soll. Als die Beamten anrückten, soll die Frau ihnen mit einem Messer begegnet sein. Bei einem Einsatz in der Grünberger Straße im Berliner Stadtteil Friedrichshain hat ein Polizist eine 33-Jährige erschossen. Die Frau soll die Polizisten zuvor am frühen Freitagmorgen mit einem Messer angegriffen haben, sagte der Sprecher der Staatsanwaltschaft, Martin Steltner. Der Schuss in den Oberkörper sei tödlich gewesen. Das habe die Obduktion ergeben. Nach ersten Erkenntnissen war die Polizei von einem Mann alarmiert worden, der angab, von seiner Mitbewohnerin bedroht worden zu sein. Als die eingetroffenen Beamten versuchten, in ihr Zimmer zu gelangen, soll die 33-Jährige Widerstand geleistet haben, die Lage sei “unübersichtlich” gewesen. “Dabei soll sie den Beamten mit einem Messer entgegengetreten sein, woraufhin der Polizeibeamte von seiner Schusswaffe Gebrauch machte”, heißt es in einer gemeinsamen Mitteilung von Staatsanwaltschaft und Polizei.

via rbb24: Berliner Polizist erschießt 33-Jährige bei Einsatz

https://www.facebook.com/dasbisschentotschlag/posts/2794482510590456?xts__%5B0%5D=68.ARBFgADSpR9zzmzbQlGCUBCv1Tjb2NNW9oNEPiG7HQm-jgKgHTAOutShbsfe1hKYgJzN3KnmMTNjnNoeavG-neCWTL2hlIfJG4IHmCJIcm0yl-vAIY55hOsbsTquAiUc3Qi16aLKc58yr7kVwFsU3hcE40JR9rxbkDJYxrGQjo_U-XdLpcWb25RQiLS5UQd4QaoO7jUHlU3MJHMqlbx1uY-bw56-cf02ODgwARcUgKxKnDq-4W8fgvPcWK_H3sff4ZOGPiPhwqLWt_sGZ1HT7_eJjZjLT0mIxTGwEyfW2go_FPtUTCqxdUKUz_c7jcGCfTE_2RGXdDy0dK7iu7tquwxTyu6UEdN3EZlqTysp-2QlhJVdu8w-lSK8tYUnqP_2IsV9Zg-qcHMDMFuqoTs4MGVCmgJDk9BS6ixF_FGTJJ6g0MuzuUU-syS4E8iWJu7R8RBAg8eSiT69WF3Uy9FXQLsYTnow2JTP__b7N5mrXULZmy5qHS6hyT4SIvVTXy7dpFesFseGNa3uMWhww2aC&__tn=-R

Racist, homophobic, threatening emails leave Wake Forest University on edge

The emails to faculty in sociology and two other departments called for a “purge” of minorities and the LGBTQ community. Three months after a set of anonymous, threatening, racist, antisemitic and homophobic emails sent a wave of fear through the sociology department at Wake Forest University, the department chairman says he’s still waiting for university leaders to announce a meaningful response. The emails to faculty in sociology and two other departments called for a “purge” of minorities and the LGBTQ community. Alarmed by what he deemed white supremacist terrorism, chairman Joseph Soares canceled sociology classes for a week. When they resumed, Wake Forest police officers were stationed outside classrooms and the building itself. Doors normally open were closed and locked. Even a study lounge was locked.

via nbcnews: Racist, homophobic, threatening emails leave Wake Forest University on edge

Manisch anmutender Hass – 87 Bombendrohungen von Hitler-Fan André M. – #schauhin #terror

Der Rechtsextremist André M. verschickte Dutzende Anschlagswarnungen innerhalb eines halben Jahres. Jetzt steht die Anklageschrift, Der Fall wirkt selbst im wilden Spektrum rechtsextremer Kriminalität bizarr. Insgesamt 87 Bombendrohungen soll der Hitler-Fan André M. mit dem Pseudonym „National Sozialistische Offensive“ zwischen Oktober 2018 und April 2019 bundesweit per Mail verschickt haben, teils mit gravierenden Folgen. Im Januar 2019 räumte die Polizei die Justizzentren in Potsdam und Wiesbaden, die Oberlandesgerichte in Köln, Naumburg und Schleswig sowie die Landgerichte in Magdeburg, Erfurt und Kiel. Im März wurden der Hauptbahnhof Lübeck, das Finanzamt Gelsenkirchen und das Rathaus in Flensburg evakuiert. Die Polizei suchte mit Spürhunden die Areale ab, fand allerdings nichts. Im April 2019 nahm die Polizei André M. in Halstenbek fest, einem Vorort von Hamburg. Seitdem sitzt der heute 31-jährige Mann in Untersuchungshaft. Jetzt gibt es eine Anklage der Generalstaatsanwaltschaft Berlin. Es geht um mehr als 100 Delikte. (…) In einem Schreiben habe M. angekündigt, bundesweit Briefbomben zu verschicken, Bürger auf offener Straße hinzurichten und den biologischen Kampfstoff Rizin einzusetzen, sagen Sicherheitskreise. Und M. habe Kinderpornografie eingesetzt. Drohungen gingen zudem bei Medien ein. (…) Die Behörden gehen davon aus, dass André M. der Hauptakteur der „Offensive“ war. Der vorbestrafte Mann gilt schon länger als Psychopath. 2006 verurteilte ihn das Amtsgericht Pinneberg wegen gefährlicher Körperverletzung, Sachbeschädigung, Beleidigung und weiteren Delikten zu neun Monaten Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung. 2007 folgte eine Jugendstrafe von elf Monaten, auch auf Bewährung, weil M. Anleitungen zum Bau von Bomben veröffentlicht und bei 23 Autos Reifen zerstochen hatte. 2008 gab es dann beim Landgericht Itzehoe eine Jugendstrafe von dreieinhalb Jahren. André M. hatte mit Kumpanen ein Fahrzeug abgebrannt. Die Clique zerstörte auch mit selbst hergestelltem Sprengstoff einen Zigarettenautomaten. (…) Der Mann radikalisierte sich politisch offenkundig über das Internet. Im sogenannten Deep Web, einer schwer zugänglichen Sphäre, soll er bei einem Forum aktiv gewesen sein, das auch der Attentäter David Sonboly nutzte. Der junge Rechtsextremist erschoss im Juli 2016 in München neun Menschen aus rassistischem Hass. Sonboly hatte sich die Tatwaffe über die Plattform „Deutschland im Deep Web“ (DiDW) beschafft. André M. soll in dem Forum als „Sturmsoldat“ aufgetreten sein. Bei DiDW soll M. auch an einen oder mehrere weitere Fanatiker geraten sein.

via tagesspiegel: Manisch anmutender Hass 87 Bombendrohungen von Hitler-Fan André M.

#Extremist neo-Nazi leader is a former Villanova student, N.J. resident, reports say – #terror #TheBase #awd #atomwaffen

The head of an extremist neo-Nazi group under investigation by U.S. counterterrorism officials was revealed Friday to be a man with strong Philadelphia-area connections, including graduating from a prestigious New Jersey prep school and attending a Main Line university in the 1990s, according to the British newspaper the Guardian. Rinaldo Nazzaro, 46, previously known by the aliases “Norman Spear” and “Roman Wolf,” is reportedly the founder of The Base, a white nationalist group formed in 2018, which has advocated for a race war and creation of a white ethnostate in the Pacific Northwest. (…) A Villanova spokesperson told The Inquirer on Friday that a student named Ronald Nazzaro attended the university from 1991 to 1994, then withdrew before graduating. The student newspaper at the time listed him as a philosophy major. Nazzaro could not be reached by The Inquirer on Friday afternoon, and did not respond to requests for comment from the Guardian and BBC. He has held an address in North Bergen, N.J., but is now believed to be living in Russia. A video posted online in March showed him in Russia wearing a T-shirt with the image of President Vladimir Putin and the words Russia, absolute power.

via inquier: Extremist neo-Nazi leader is a former Villanova student, N.J. resident, reports say

siehe auch: Members of U.S. Neo-Nazi Terror Group Believed Their Leader Was in Russia For Years. The mysterious leader of the group, known by the alias “Norman Spear” has allegedly been identified as Rinaldo Nazzarro. But he has long left digital breadcrumbs suggesting he lives abroad. The man who singlehandedly built a neo-Nazi terror group in order to set off a white supremacist insurgency in America may be living in Russia. The leader of The Base, who has gone by the aliases Norman Spear and Roman Wolf, was recently reported by the Guardian to be a 46-year-old New Jersey native named Rinaldo Nazzaro. The BBC followed the Guardian’s story today and provided evidence that Nazzaro left New York to live in St Petersburg, Russia with his Russian wife two years ago. (…) Prior to the Guardian investigation, little was known about the group’s shadowy leader. He longed for a race war and encouraged his members to undertake covert “direct action”—shorthand in militant circles for terrorist attacks. Seven members of The Base were arrested in a nationwide FBI operation last week, some for plotting assassinations and others for a plan to open fire at a gun rally in Virginia. Spear, on the other hand, remains free, appearing only in court documents under one of his aliases as a mysterious boss who manages a network of militants across the U.S. Since its inception Spear was able to freely travel across the United States helping organize regional cells. Spear was also, according to statements made in 2018, active in the Northwest Front—a deeply racist political movement working towards establishing a white ethnostate in the Pacific Northwest—and was an acquaintance of the movement’s leader, the late Harold Covington, who died in August 2018. The Guardian was able to trace Spear’s identity because of a parcel of land he bought in the Pacific Northwest. Spear formed The Base shortly after Covington’s death. Much like the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen Division—which is linked to five murders (…) To become a member of The Base, an applicant must fill out a survey on its official website and answer several questions on how a prospective recruit came to their neo-Nazi ideology. If a potential member passes the questionnaire, they undertake a voice call with Spear and other vetting team leaders comprised of senior members of the terror group. Questions would concern neo-Nazi ideology, military tactics, and the recruit’s willingness to meet in real life. From there, the recruit would meet with a nearby member in person and become a full-fledged member; Neo-Nazi Rinaldo Nazzaro running US militant group The Base from Russia. The American founder of US-based militant neo-Nazi group The Base is directing the organisation from Russia, a BBC investigation has found. Rinaldo Nazzaro, 46, who uses the aliases “Norman Spear” and “Roman Wolf”, left New York for St Petersburg less than two years ago. The Base is a major counter terrorism focus for the FBI. Seven alleged members were charged this month with various offences, including conspiracy to commit murder. Court documents prepared by the FBI describe The Base as a “racially motivated violent extremist group” that “seeks to accelerate the downfall of the United States government, incite a race war, and establish a white ethno-state”. (…) In social media posts that year, “Norman Spear” posted imagery and videos by the outlawed British terrorist group National Action, praised al-Qaeda, and asked for volunteers possessing various skills, including with weapons, for his new organisation.Audio recordings posted online capture “Spear” lecturing on subjects such as “guerrilla warfare”. He is variously described as a military veteran, a former CIA field officer, and a defence studies expert.”Norman Spear” was previously associated with an obscure movement that seeks a “white homeland” in the US Pacific Northwest, which includes the area where “Base Global” purchased land.Following the nationwide FBI arrests of alleged Base members last week, an online channel used by the group to post propaganda carried a defiant statement from “Roman Wolf”, saying “we will continue our struggle for survival undeterred”.

How Spain’s Far-Right Is Exploiting A Local Political Fight To Start A Culture War

Homophobic Franco nostalgists are using the controversy over Catalonia’s 2017 independence vote to polarize what was once a beacon of tolerance in Europe. Nearly 45 years after Spain’s fascist dictator Francisco Franco died and this country transitioned to democracy, a resurgent far-right movement is once again on the march. Just look at the past few weeks. Days after Spain swore in a new left-wing government this month, far-right leader Santiago Abascal declared a “war without a barracks” in the Parliament, courts and streets of Europe’s fifth-largest economy. Bombastic rhetoric quickly manifested into action. Two weeks ago, his ultra-nationalist Vox party marched thousands through Spanish cities, denouncing Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez as a “traitor” to the nation. This past week, his lawmakers wrangled new provisions allowing parents to yank children from public school lectures that teach sexual safety and understanding of the LGBTQ community, which Abascal derided as the “corruption of minors” with “erotic games.” Far-right movements have spread across the developed world over the past decade as voters angered over income inequality, decaying social services and increasing chaos from conflicts and climate disasters have sought easy answers in age-old social divisions. It’s a sign of the movement’s expanding reach that the moves here in Spain came within days of a march by gun-toting extremists in Richmond, Virginia, and an announcement by France’s far-right leader Marine Le Pen that she will run again for president.

via huff: How Spain’s Far-Right Is Exploiting A Local Political Fight To Start A Culture War

https://twitter.com/FFRAFAction/status/1221446103935135745

MAD-Chef: Rund 550 rechtsextreme Verdachtsfälle in Bundeswehr

Man wolle künftig genauer hinsehen, um Rechtsextremisten innerhalb der Bundeswehr aufzuspüren, sagte Christof Gramm im Oktober. Nun hat der Präsident des Militärischen Abschirmdienstes (MAD) eine Zahl genannt. Demnach gibt es rund 550 Soldaten, die unter Verdacht stünden. Der deutsche Militärgeheimdienst ermittelt laut einem Medienbericht gegen rund 550 Bundeswehrsoldaten wegen des Verdachts auf Rechtsextremismus. 2019 seien 360 neue Verdachtsfälle dazugekommen, erklärte der Präsident des Militärischen Abschirmdienstes, Christof Gramm, (MAD) der “Welt am Sonntag”. Überführt worden seien 14 Extremisten, davon 8 Rechtsextremisten. Zudem habe der Geheimdienst 40 Personen mit “fehlender Verfassungstreue” identifiziert. Gramm kündigte an, 2020 erstmals einen offiziellen MAD-Tätigkeitsbericht zu veröffentlichen. Einen solchen hatte kürzlich der Wehrbeauftragte des Bundestages, Hans-Peter Bartels, gefordert. In der Eliteeinheit Kommando Spezialkräfte (KSK) bearbeitet der MAD aktuell rund 20 Verdachtsfälle im Bereich Rechtsextremismus – Anfang 2019 sei es noch etwa die Hälfte gewesen, sagte Gramm der Zeitung. Damit sei die Zahl der Verdachtsfälle beim KSK – in Relation zur Personalstärke – etwa fünfmal so hoch wie beim Rest der Truppe.

via rnd: MAD-Chef: Rund 550 rechtsextreme Verdachtsfälle in Bundeswehr

siehe auch: 550 Verdachtsfälle in der Bundeswehr. Wie viele Bundeswehrsoldaten haben rechtsextreme Bestrebungen? Der Präsident des Militärischen Abschirmdienstes, Gramm, spricht in der “Welt am Sonntag” von aktuell 550 Verdachtsfällen. Besonders stark betroffen sei die Eliteeinheit KSK. Der deutsche Militärgeheimdienst ermittelt derzeit gegen rund 550 Bundeswehrsoldaten wegen des Verdachts auf Rechtsextremismus. Das ist eine deutliche Zunahme: 2019 seien 360 neue Verdachtsfälle dazugekommen, sagte der Präsident des Militärischen Abschirmdienstes (MAD), Christof Gramm, der “Welt am Sonntag”. Nachgewiesen habe man eine extremistische Haltung im vergangenen Jahr bei 14 Personen, unter ihnen acht Rechtsextremisten. Zudem habe der Geheimdienst 40 Personen mit “fehlender Verfassungstreue” identifiziert. Ziel sei es, “nicht nur Extremisten, sondern auch Personen mit fehlender Verfassungstreue aus der Bundeswehr zu entfernen“, sagte Gramm der Zeitung. Den Anstieg der Zahlen führte er auch darauf zurück, dass seine Behörde genauer hinsehe. In der Eliteeinheit Kommando Spezialkräfte (KSK) bearbeitet der MAD aktuell rund 20 Verdachtsfälle im Bereich Rechtsextremismus – Anfang 2019 sei es noch etwa die Hälfte gewesen, sagte Gramm der Zeitung. Damit sei die Zahl der Verdachtsfälle beim KSK – in Relation zur Personalstärke – etwa fünfmal so hoch wie beim Rest der Truppe. Mitglieder der KSK-Eliteeinheit – unter ihnen ist die Zahl der Verdachtsfälle anteilig besonders hoch. Für das laufende Jahr kündigte Gramm an, erstmals einen offiziellen MAD-Tätigkeitsbericht zu veröffentlichen. Das hatte kürzlich der Wehrbeauftragte des Bundestages, Hans-Peter Bartels, gefordert. Erst vor gut einer Woche war bekannt geworden, dass der Militärgeheimdienst in den vergangenen vier Jahren gegen 208 Offiziere wegen des Verdachts auf Rechtsextremismus ermittelt hat. Wie das Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland aus einer Antwort des Verteidigungsministeriums auf eine FDP-Anfrage berichtete, mussten sich 34 dieser mutmaßlich rechtsextremen Offiziere vor dem Wehrdisziplinargericht verantworten. Nach Angaben der Bundesregierung waren 2019 insgesamt 38.187 Soldaten im Rang eines Offiziers in der Bundeswehr tätig.

Prepping for a race war: documents reveal inner workings of neo-Nazi group – #theBase #terror #awd #atomwaffen

Chats, audio and video obtained by the Guardian give a rare insight into the workings of a disturbing white supremacist group. The Base, a US-based white supremacist “social network” that has recently been targeted by the FBI in raids leading to the arrest of several members, was active, growing and continuing to prepare for large-scale violence. The Guardian has obtained chat records, audio recordings and videos provided by an anti-fascist whistleblower who spent more than a year charting the inside workings of the Base. The same infiltrator took control of The Base’s telegram channel in the early hours of Saturday morning, US time, and posted multiple memes mocking the group’s founder, Rinaldo Nazzaro. The Guardian studied leaked materials relayed by the whistleblower and pursued other lines of inquiry to exclusively reveal the real identity of the Base’s secretive leader as Nazzaro, 46, from New Jersey. Nazzaro is currently living in Russia with his Russian wife. Until the Guardian’s exposé little was known about his background and he was only known by the alias “Norman Spear”. The exclusive materials show how the group has planned terror campaigns; vandalized synagogues; organised armed training camps; and recruited new members who extolled an ideology of all-out race war. The cache of documents and recordings gives a rare insight into how such neo-Nazi terror groups operate. The Base – an approximate English translation of “al-Qaida” – began recruiting in late 2018 and pushing for both the collapse of society and a race war. Members of the group stand accused of federal hate crimes, murder plots and firearms offenses, and have harbored international fugitives in recent months. (…) The Guardian’s source, an anti-Nazi activist, rose to a position of trust within the group, which allowed him to take thousands of screenshots in chatrooms used by the Base since 2018. In November 2018, those chats were infiltrated by antifa activists, and members were outed, or “doxxed”, amid early media reporting. At this point, the Base tightened up vetting processes and moved their chats to an encrypted platform called Wire. Under the motto “there is no political solution” the group embraces an “accelerationist” ideology, which holds that acts of violence and terror are required to push liberal democracy towards collapse, preparing the way for white supremacists to seize power and establish an ethno-state. (…) Some members of the Base were also involved with the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen Division, whose members have been involved in several murders. Included in the materials obtained by the Guardian is a record of members signaling their intention to commit hate crimes and terrorize their victims. One such involved Richard Tobin, 18, whose handle inside the Base was “landser”. He claimed to also be a member of Atomwaffen Division. Tobin is currently in federal custody, awaiting trial for an alleged conspiracy he organized inside the Base’s chatrooms. Writing on 15 September last year in the Base’s chatroom Tobin wrote: “Our whole purpose is gradual escalation and we’ve done absolutely fucking NOTHING. It’s time to stop fucking around and get serious. Between September 20-25 I want everyone who isn’t in a wheelchair to get out and act. Flyers, windows, and tires. Let’s take back our image of strength and cohesion.” Tobin set out tactics for the vandalism, including instructions to “wear gloves, cover your faces at all times, shoe covers if you can manage it”. The Base’s founder Nazzaro, AKA “Norman Spear”, advised: “No point in random vandalizing … Much more effective if it’s targeted.”

via guardian: Prepping for a race war: documents reveal inner workings of neo-Nazi group

siehe auch: Guardian investigation reveals neo-Nazi leader owns land in Ferry County. A new report from the Guardian indicated the leader of an American neo-Nazi terror group owns land in north-central Washington. According to the report by Jason Wilson, the leader and founder of “The Base” was identified as US-born Rinaldo Nazzaro, who has worked under several aliases like “Norman Spear” and “Roman Wolf.” Rumors about the Base’s presence in the Inland Northwest began spreading in August when a left-wing activist group, Eugene Antifa, posted online saying members of the group were flying to Spokane from across the country to hold an event. Eugene Antifa’s Tweet warned that members of The Base were planning to build a hate camp somewhere in Stevens County. Through public records requests, the Guardian was able to obtain emails from the Stevens County Sheriff’s Brad Manke, in which he is found contacting the FBI and the Southern Poverty Law Center asking for advice on the group.

https://twitter.com/161eug/status/1158240547724677120