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Tag: Neo-nazi

  • North Texas teen joined neo-Nazi group to make mass school shooting threats: warrant

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    A Fort Worth 17-year-old accused of making social media threats to kill children at North Texas schools is part of a neo-Nazi group, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.

    Investigators believe Evan Banda, who is charged with terroristic threat and terrorism, joined a “violent international neo-Nazi and accelerationist extremist group” after meeting one of the organization’s leaders on a video game platform, a Fort Worth police detective wrote in the affidavit.

    The name of the group was redacted in the copy of the warrant released to the Star-Telegram, but police wrote that the group “adheres to a ‘Nihilistic National socialist’ philosophy, combining neo-Nazi and Satanic ideologies. They promote extreme violence and chaos to bring about the collapse of western society, in this particular case, Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas.”

    When they became aware of the threats on Jan. 6, police said they were working with agencies including the FBI and Texas Department of Public Safety to investigate the posts, and they had strong reason to believe the threats were not credible but were created with the “sole purpose of inciting fear.”

    The detective described a video posted on social media by the group showing Crowley Middle School, which was recorded by Banda on Jan. 6 while he was riding his bike, the affidavit states. The video included the captions, “North Crowley School. You’ll Be The First (Expletive). Your Time Has Come. We’re Going To Kill A Lot Of Children. Blood Will Be Shed In You.”

    Someone posted a comment under the video saying, “We are planning attacks in Texas, we will post all the evidence and videos in our channel. Many children will die.”

    In another video described in the affidavit, a masked man holding a handgun said, “I have a rifle, a pistol, explosives and around 700 rounds of ammunition. I am confident I can kill 50 children, but I am not alone. My associates will be entering schools and start killing people. We will come to all the schools.“

    The following schools were listed in the post with the video:

    • Andrews Elementary School
    • Baranoff Elementary School
    • Barrington Elementary School
    • Lake Dallas High School
    • South Hills High School
    • Arlington Heights High School
    • Castleberry High School
    • Nolan Catholic High School
    • Watson High School
    • Timber Creek High School
    • Eagle Mountain High School
    • RMA Fort Worth Public School
    • Diamond Hill-Jarvis High School
    • North Crowley High School

    Police say Banda also recorded videos when he set five cars on fire in a south Fort Worth neighborhood near Fox Run Park between Christmas Eve and New Year’s Day. Those videos were shared on related social media accounts, the affidavit states.

    Investigators first obtained a warrant to search Banda’s home in connection with the arson case. When he was interviewed by police, Banda initially denied any involvement in the arsons but later admitted to setting the fires, according to the affidavit.

    Based on Banda’s phone records and what he told detectives, it was determined that he was an active member of the group that made the threats of mass shootings at schools, the affidavit states.

    Banda told detectives that he participated in the threats out of fear of being “doxxed,” meaning his private information like name, address and phone numbers would be published online.

    The teenager’s phone also revealed that in a group chat it was discussed that Banda would take video at Crowley schools to confirm whether law enforcement was present. No police were visible at the middle school when he recorded the video on Jan. 6.

    “Once the group realized that there was no law enforcement at the school, one member suggested that the video be utilized to suggest that the Crowley Middle School is the first location that this group would be killing children at,” the affidavit states.

    Detectives noted in the affidavit that Banda at times “participated in the discussion of the offense” in the group chat. Banda told police that another person involved in planning the threats is a student at North Crowley High School.

    Banda is being held in the Tarrant County Jail with bond set at almost $2 million. The 17-year-old also is charged with possession of child pornography because of a video found in his possession the depicted the sexual assault of a child, according to a complaint filed by the Tarrant County Criminal District Attorney’s Office.

    This story was originally published January 15, 2026 at 9:09 PM.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Shambhavi Rimal

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Shambhavi covers crime, law enforcement and other breaking news in Fort Worth and Tarrant County. She graduated from the University of North Texas and previously covered a variety of general assignment topics in West Texas. She grew up in Nepal.

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    Shambhavi Rimal

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  • Neo-Nazi charged in killing of gay Phoenix man wants bond reduced

    Neo-Nazi charged in killing of gay Phoenix man wants bond reduced

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    Neo-Nazi skinhead Cory Young is asking a Maricopa County judge to lower his bond from $100,000 to $25,000 for his involvement in the savage beating death of a gay Phoenix Man.

    Young, 44, claims he and Jake Kelly were actually “good friends” and “like family.”

    That is one of several questionable claims in a Feb. 22 motion asking Superior Court Judge Daniel Martin to modify Young’s release conditions. The motion downplays Young’s violent past and portrays his actions regarding Kelly’s killing in a favorable light.

    Young; his wife, Shannon, 38; and their friend Angel Mullooly, 34, were arrested in November in connection with the slaying of Kelly, who was 49. The Youngs are each charged with one felony count of interfering with a police investigation, and Mullooly is charged with second-degree murder.

    Shannon Young recently had her bond reduced from $50,000 to $5,000 and was released on bail. Mullooly is being held on a $1 million bond.

    Cory and Shannon Young shared a house in North Phoenix with Kelly. The Youngs told Phoenix police that on the night of Aug. 27, they heard a loud noise outside their home, went to investigate and found Kelly in the driveway, beaten to a pulp. The pair told police they took Kelly inside, gave him a bath to try to revive him and then dressed him in dry clothes and placed him on a sofa.

    Cory Young “did not witness Jake’s injuries,” the motion claims, but the trauma was “consistent with a person or persons injuring Jake.”

    Why didn’t Young dial 911 immediately? The motion offers the following rationale: “Given Cory’s experience is (sic) witnessing people sustaining physical injuries from fighting and witnessing injuries resolve therein, Cory reasonably believed (having no medical training and/or direct medical knowledge) that Jake’s injuries would resolve.”

    Instead of calling 911, the motion says, Young ran cold water over Kelly in a bathtub, then “placed him on the living room sofa so he could monitor Jake throughout the night.”

    Approximately 16 hours later, Cory Young finally decided that Kelly was not improving and “elected to transport Jake to the emergency room.”

    The motion claims that Young “had no direct knowledge of how Jake sustained his injuries,” and it downplays a photo obtained by police that shows Young holding up the head of Kelly as he lies seriously injured outside their house, with Shannon standing nearby.

    According to court records, Mullooly texted the photo to an ex-girlfriend, prefaced by the comment, “I’ve fucked up Jake 2Xs, babe.”

    click to enlarge

    Jake Kelly was beaten and left in the driveway of his north Phoenix home on Aug. 27. He died from his injuries on Sept. 8.

    Courtesy Jan Kelly

    A photo worth a thousand words

    A witness informed police that Shannon Young had told her that Cory Young and Mullooly got into a fight with Kelly, the motion says. Young and Mullooly “fucked him up,” Shannon allegedly told the witness in a phone conversation.

    Cory Young’s motion claims that the witness “beefed up” the statement to police in a second interview.

    The motion makes no mention of a photo described in court documents as “Jake in the bathtub bleeding from his injuries,” which Phoenix police said Shannon texted to the witness.

    The motion does, however, include a horrifying photo of Kelly taken by Cory Young several hours after Kelly was brought inside the house. In the photo, a limp Kelly sits on the floor, propped up against what looks like a TV stand, his head down, his eyes closed and his arms at his side. His body is covered in bruises, cuts and red abrasions. A small white dog can be seen licking at his wounds.

    Thin and pale, wearing striped shorts, Kelly looks like what he was: badly injured.

    The motion states that Cory Young texted the photo of Kelly to Young’s mom.

    The victim’s mother, Jan Kelly, told Phoenix New Times that she was incensed by the motion and the photo.

    “Why did he send it to his mother?” Jan Kelly asked. “Bragging rights?”

    Jan Kelly likened it to the photo allegedly taken by Mullooly following Jake’s beatdown and wondered if both were “trophy photos.”

    “I don’t understand why they’re showing that picture in the motion,” she said. “They’re trying to say that they thought he was going to be OK, but you can’t look at that picture and think he was going to be OK.”

    She said her son suffered multiple fractures of his skull, face, sternum and ribs. He also received numerous internal injuries, underwent several surgeries and was placed on life support. He died on Sept. 8.

    The motion contends that “despite what the media continues to incorrectly portray, Cory and Jake were like family.” Young’s motion supports this assertion by including photos from Facebook, previously reported on by New Times, of Jake Kelly officiating at the Youngs’ marriage in a backyard ceremony in March 2023.

    Jan Kelly confirmed to New Times that these photos were taken around the time of the Youngs’ marriage. She said her son moved in with Shannon after being introduced by a mutual friend. Shannon needed help with the rent, and Jake needed a place to stay. She didn’t know exactly when Jake moved in. Cory Young moved in sometime after Jake.

    The relationship between the Youngs and Jake went south as the year progressed, she said. Jan Kelly regularly talked to her son, and the week before his death, he was depressed and had recently moved into a trailer behind the house he shared with the Youngs.

    Jake also had broken down crying at his job at a local Italian restaurant, and his boss had given him three weeks off to deal with whatever was troubling him, she said. He told his mother that he was very unhappy.

    “I said, ‘Do you want me to come to Arizona? Do you want me to come get you?’” she recalled. “He finally said, ‘That’s OK, Mom, I’m going to get a new place to live this week. I’ll talk to you next weekend.’ I never heard from him again.”

    Jan Kelly scoffed at the motion’s statement that there is “no evidence whatsoever that Cory is a threat to her or anyone in the community.”

    At a hearing in November to determine Cory Young’s bond, Jan Kelly asked the hearing commissioner to keep Young in jail over his alleged involvement in the killing of her son. She also feared for safety if Cory Young received a bond.

    The commissioner said she could not make him nonbondable, but she did make electronic monitoring a requirement if Young was released.

    click to enlarge Jan Kelly outside Maricopa County Superior Court

    Jan Kelly outside the Maricopa County Superior Court building in downtown Phoenix after three people charged in connection with her son’s death appeared in court on Nov. 22.

    Stephen Lemons

    Prison enforcer

    The motion states that Cory Young “has not been convicted of any crime” in connection with Jake Kelly’s slaying and is “presumed innocent under the law.”

    Still, Young has experience inflicting serious injuries upon others, according to records from the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry.

    In 2003, Young was doing a 10-year stint in prison for several felony charges, including burglary and aggravated assault, when he attacked another prisoner with his fists, leaving his victim in “a pool of blood.”

    Court records state that Young struck his victim “eight or nine times in the head.” In addition to other wounds, the victim “sustained several facial fractures, which eventually required surgery.”

    As a result, Young was charged with aggravated assault and convicted in 2004, adding three years to his sentence.

    In June 2007, Young and another prisoner allegedly attacked a fellow inmate. An ADCRR report on the incident described how Young and another attacker were “simultaneously striking their victim with closed fists in the head and face area.” The attack continued “even after their victim had fallen to the ground prostrate” and despite prison staff commanding them to stop.

    “Force (chemical agents) was required to stop this assault,” the report said.

    A supplemental report cited interviews with “many Caucasian inmates who align with the Skinhead Security Threat Group,” as well as “Aryan Brotherhood-affiliated” prisoners. According to the report, the assault was ordered by “white inmates on the yard” to punish a prisoner who had been recruiting for a rival skinhead group.

    Young’s body is a patchwork quilt of neo-Nazi and white supremacist tattoos, including a large Nazi swastika in the center of his chest.

    New Times interviewed Young in 2016 while he was working as a tattoo artist with Wolfskin Ink in Phoenix, which is no longer in business. Young was honest about his affiliations. “I was running with a lot of skinheads and the Aryan Brotherhood and stuff like that,” he said about his time behind bars.

    He claimed neo-Nazism was “a dead cause” but admitted to still having some of the same views as he did when he was in prison.

    Young continued plying his trade as an ink slinger. According to court records, he was arrested for his alleged involvement in the Kelly homicide while he was at the Glendale tattoo parlor where he had been working.

    He was a popular tattooist, judging by the praise he received for his work on the business’s Facebook page. That same tattoo parlor recently announced on a Facebook post that it will be closing its doors on March 16.

    A trial date for the Kelly homicide has not been set. Martin recently rescheduled a hearing from March 20 to July 22 to determine the trial date.

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    Stephen Lemons

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  • Kanye West Wears Shirt Supporting Nazi After Apologizing For Antisemitism – Perez Hilton

    Kanye West Wears Shirt Supporting Nazi After Apologizing For Antisemitism – Perez Hilton

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    A picture is worth a thousand words… or more powerful than a 40-minute apology video, we guess?

    Kanye West released an apology for his antisemitic comments last month, and was on the cusp of dropping another one, a rambling video said to be nonsensical but lengthy. But what good are those words when he’s wearing a picture of what he really supports?

    The Power rapper was spotted in a pic on the social media of fellow rapper JPEGMafia on Friday morning, and in it he’s wearing an extremely controversial t-shirt. It’s the shirt of a Norwegian black metal band from the ’90s called Burzum — a band actually made up of just one man, Varg Vilkernes (above, inset — from prison), whose face is shown prominently on the tee.

    If any of these names are sounding familiar it’s less likely you’ve heard his music on Spotify — and more likely you’ve heard about him on a true crime podcast.

    Related: Kanye & Bianca Censori Spending ‘Time Apart’ — He’s Moved Into A Hotel!

    Vilkernes is a convicted arsonist and murderer who spent 15 years in prison for burning down churches and stabbing to death a bandmate and rival named Euronymous from the band Mayhem. They made a movie about it a couple years back called Lords of Chaos. It starred a Culkin.

    The other thing that’s crucial to know about Varg? He was an out-and-proud, unabashed Nazi.

    Yes, during his time in prison he actually launched a whole neo-Nazi movement in Scandinavia called the Norwegian Heathen Front. He was one of the few people to receive a copy of the manifesto by that far-right terrorist who killed 77 people in Norway in 2011. He was arrested a couple years later on suspicion of planning acts of terrorism, but it couldn’t be proven. After that he dropped some of the more overtly antisemitic, explicitly Nazi rhetoric. But he still preaches the same crap: racism and white supremacy, enough that YouTube deplatformed him in 2019.

    We say all this so you know this isn’t hyperbole — this man is a modern neo-Nazi thought leader. And those in the know spoke out, with fans on social media writing:

    “Bro wearing a band t-shirt from a known Neo-n*zi.”

    “Burzum’s music and views are trash so that makes sense for YE.”

    “Huge fan of you bro but this is disappointing.”

    Has that last person not been paying attention to anything else Ye has been saying for the past couple years??

    Liora Rez, the exec director of StopAntisemitism, said in a statement to DailyMail.com:

    “StopAntisemitism strongly condemns Kanye’s decision to wear a t-shirt depicting Kristian ‘Varg’ Vikernes, a neo-Nazi killer with a notorious history of violence and hate. This is yet another disgusting example of the disgraced rapper publicly associating with white supremacists — promoting the legacy of an individual who has caused immense harm and poses a threat to marginalized communities everywhere. There will never be a redemption arc for Kanye West, period. What will he try next? Another apology in Hebrew?”

    Fair.

    Obviously this isn’t the most egregiously antisemitic thing Kanye has done, but it’s a pretty big red flag — or black flag in this case — that he’s in no way remorseful for his views.

    To learn more about antisemitism and how you can help fight it, check out https://www.adl.org/.  

    [Image via FoxNews/Variance Films/YouTube.]

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    Perez Hilton

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