Plans for attack in New Orleans thwarted, authorities say
[December 17, 2025]
By SARA CLINE
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Plans to “carry out an attack” in New Orleans
were thwarted after an ex-Marine was arrested while on the way to the
Louisiana city with guns and body armor in the car, according to court
documents obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press.
Micah James Legnon, 28, was charged with threats in interstate commerce.
Federal authorities said they had been surveilling Legnon due to ties to
an extremist anti-capitalist and anti-government group. Four members of
the group were arrested Friday in the Mojave Desert, east of Los
Angeles, as they were rehearsing a foiled plot to set off bombs in
Southern California on New Year’s Eve, authorities said.
Plans of an attack in New Orleans began to intensify after several
hundred immigration agents were deployed to southeast Louisiana,
authorities said. The enforcement operation, dubbed “Catahoula Crunch,”
has a goal of 5,000 arrests. The crackdown is the latest in a series of
enforcement operations that have also unfolded in Los Angeles, Chicago
and Charlotte, North Carolina.

Legnon believed it was time to “recreate” Waco with an attack in New
Orleans, authorities said in court documents. They pointed to a Dec. 4
chat message by Legnon written under the alias “Kateri The Witch" the
day after Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrived in New
Orleans. Legnon’s alias had “she/her” written beside it, but jail
records referred to Legnon as male.
Investigators believe Legnon's chat message referred to the 1993 siege
at a Waco, Texas, compound that ended after 51 days and the deaths of
four federal agents, a religious leader and 76 of his followers.
Eight days after the post in the group chat, Legnon appeared to place a
weapon into a car, an FBI agent surveilling Legnon said in the court
document.
“On my way” to New Orleans, Legnon said in a group chat. Legnon then
shared a video of a gun and bullet proof vest and wrote “just incase.”
After Legnon's Dec. 12 arrest, agents found an assault rifle, a pistol,
a gas canister and body armor inside the car. Inside Legnon's apartment
in New Iberia, Louisiana, agents found sniper training manuals, SWAT
training manuals, assault rifles, and rounds of ammunition.
[to top of second column]
|

Court documents did not list an attorney who could speak on Legnon's
behalf. The Office of the State Public Defender and the United
States Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Louisiana did
not immediately respond to requests for information on Legnon's
attorney, and jail officials said they did not know who might be
representing Legnon.
Officials say Legnon “is suspected to be associated with” the Turtle
Island Liberation Front. The group calls for “liberation through
decolonization tribal sovereignty," based on court documents.
Federal authorities described the group as “a far-left,
pro-Palestine, anti-government and anti-capitalist group.”
In the California case, a member of the group created a detailed
plan to bomb five or more businesses across Southern California on
New Year’s Eve. The plot included planting backpacks filled with
complex pipe bombs that were set to be detonated simultaneously at
midnight on New Year’s Eve.
Two of the group’s members also had discussed plans to attack ICE
agents and vehicles with pipe bombs in 2026, according to the
criminal complaint.
Some details of the foiled plot in California are eerily similar to
this year's deadly attack in New Orleans' famed French Quarter.
In the early hours of Jan. 1, 2025, Shamsud-Din Jabbar drove his
truck down Bourbon Street, plowing into New Year’s reveler’s —
killing 14 people and injuring dozens more. Prior to the attack,
Jabbar, who was later fatally shot by police, had placed multiple
bombs in coolers around the French Quarter. None of the explosive
devices detonated. Jabbar was inspired by the Islamic State group,
authorities said.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |