A suspected neo-Nazi has been sentenced to 30 months in
federal prison for a gun crime, announced U.S. Attorney for the Northern
District of Texas Erin Nealy Cox.
Aiden Bruce-Umbaugh, 23, pleaded guilty to possession of
firearms and ammunition by a prohibited person in Lubbock in January. Appearing
via video teleconference from the Lubbock County Detention Center, the
defendant was sentenced today before U.S. District Judge James Wesley Hendrix.
According to his plea papers, Mr. Bruce-Umbaugh – who was
arrested in November in Post, Texas, dressed in tactical gear – admitted to
possessing AR-15 rifle, two AK-47 rifles, a Sig Sauer 9mm pistol, and assorted
ammunition while being an unlawful user of a controlled substance. (Federal law
prohibits unlawful users of controlled substances to possess firearms.)
Mr. Bruce-Umbaugh admits he and Kaleb Cole were pulled over
in a blue Ford in which law enforcement officers discovered the firearms, a
small canister of marijuana, and a vial of THC oil.
Mr. Bruce-Umbaugh – who “avoided eye contact and limited
conversation” with law enforcement and denied having anything illegal inside
the vehicle during the traffic stop – later admitted that the firearms,
marijuana, and THC belonged to him, telling investigators he smoked marijuana
on a daily basis, according to plea papers.
In a detention hearing in November, prosecutors argued the
government had reason to believe Mr. Bruce-Umbaugh is a member of AtomWaffen
Division, a neo-Nazi hate group.
In jailhouse phone calls, Mr. Bruce-Umbaugh allegedly
referenced his affiliation with “the group,” declared he was “a Nazi,” and
discussed a photo taken of him and another AtomWaffen Division member at the
Auschwitz concentration camp, prosecutors said at the detention hearing.
Video released by the Court in February shows the defendant,
handcuffed and clad in an orange jumpsuit, telling agents, “I assume you’re
here because of my swastika flag and my firearms.”
AtomWaffen propaganda videos also admitted into evidence
depict members of the Nazi group at self-described “hate camps,” spewing
hateful rhetoric against Jews, practicing hand-to-hand combat and shooting
firearms.
“Race war now!” they cry, before one displays a Nazi salute.
“The Northern District of Texas is committed to keeping guns
out of the hands of dangerous individuals,” U.S. Attorney Nealy Cox said after
the defendant pleaded guilty. “As a drug user, this defendant should never have
been allowed to possess firearms. We’re grateful to our law enforcement
partners for helpings us keep this defendant, and his guns, off the streets.”
“The amount of weapons and ammunition seized from the
defendant could have caused serious harm. Luckily, the FBI and our law
enforcement partners successfully intervened before an act of violence could be
committed,” FBI Special Agent in Charge Matthew J. DeSarno said then. “The FBI
will continue working with our partners to protect the communities we serve.”
The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Lubbock Resident
Agency, the Garza County Sheriff’s Office, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms & Explosives conducted the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorney
Stephen Rancourt is prosecuting the case.
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