Neo-Nazi group leader convicted of plotting Maryland power grid attack
Send a link to a friend
[February 04, 2025]
By LEA SKENE
BALTIMORE (AP) — The founder of a Florida-based neo-Nazi group was
convicted Monday of conspiring with his former girlfriend to plan an
attack on Maryland’s power grid in furtherance of their shared racist
beliefs.
Brandon Russell, 29, encouraged Sarah Beth Clendaniel to carry out a
series of “sniper attacks” on electrical substations around Baltimore
that could have caused significant damage to the regional power grid,
according to federal prosecutors. Their goal was to create chaos in the
majority-Black city, prosecutors say.
The two were arrested in February 2023 — before the plans were executed.
The 12-person jury deliberated for less than an hour after hearing about
four days of testimony in federal court in Baltimore. They found Russell
guilty of one count of conspiracy to damage an energy facility, the only
charge he faced.
Russell will be sentenced at a later date. He appeared in court wearing
a light blue jacket and glasses. He conferred regularly with his
attorney throughout the trial, looking cheerful and engaged.
Several years ago, Russell co-founded the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen
Division, which is German for “atomic weapon.”
This wasn’t his first run-in with law enforcement. Russell previously
pleaded guilty to possession of an unregistered destructive device and
improper storage of explosive materials after investigators searched his
home and found a stash of highly explosive materials and a cache of
neo-Nazi signs, posters, books and flags.
During closing arguments Monday afternoon, prosecutor Joseph Baldwin
recounted trial testimony, including from a confidential informant who
got connected with Russell through the social media app Telegram.
Russell introduced Clendaniel and the informant, hoping the person could
help her obtain a firearm to use in the attack, according to
prosecutors.

“He was the team leader taking care of his warrior,” Baldwin told the
jury.
Prosecutors played a clip from a recorded phone call in which Russell
used a racist expletive and requested secrecy from the informant,
telling him: “It’s important you don’t talk about this to anyone.”
While prosecutors claimed Russell hoped to incite a race war, his
defense attorney downplayed his involvement in the plot, calling the
case “a setup from the very beginning.”
Russell was in Florida the entire time with no plans to travel to
Maryland and actively assist in carrying out the attack, attorney Ian
Goldstein said. Russell may have supported efforts to disrupt modern
society and restore white supremacy, but he wasn’t a co-conspirator in
this case, Goldstein said during his closing argument.
“He was a cheerleader — as terrible as that sounds,” Goldstein said,
acknowledging his client’s “repulsive” ideology. “That’s what he was,
and that’s not illegal.”
It wasn’t enough to convince the jury. Before jurors began deliberating
Monday evening, U.S. District Judge James Bredar told them a guilty
verdict would require a finding that Russell had “engaged, advised or
assisted” in the conspiracy with knowledge of its objectives.
[to top of second column]
|

Thomas J. Sobocinski, Special Agent in Charge, FBI Baltimore Field
Office, speaks during a news conference in Baltimore, Monday, Feb.
6, 2023. Sobocinski and Erek L. Barron, U.S. Attorney for Maryland,
announced the arrests and a federal criminal complaint charging
Sarah Beth Clendaniel, of Catonsville, and Brandon Clint Russell, of
Orlando, with conspiracy to destroy an energy facility. (Amy
Davis/The Baltimore Sun via AP, File)

Russell apparently wasn’t on law enforcement’s radar until police
responded to a 2017 double homicide at a Tampa apartment building and
found him outside crying, dressed in military fatigues. One of his
roommates had killed the other two, officials said.
Police concluded Russell had nothing to do with the deadly shootings.
But while detectives investigated, they discovered the explosive
materials and neo-Nazi paraphernalia in Russell’s possession, including
flyers that said, “Don’t prepare for exams, prepare for a race war” and
a framed photo of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh.
Russell was in the Florida National Guard at the time and had attended
the University of South Florida.
Devon Arthurs, who later pleaded guilty to killing his roommates, told
detectives he shot them for teasing him about his recent conversion to
Islam. He also said it was to thwart a terrorist attack by Atomwaffen
and claimed Russell had materials in the house “to kill civilians and
target locations like power lines, nuclear reactors, and synagogues,”
prosecutors said.
Goldstein also represented Russell in that case, when the attorney
argued that possessing explosives didn’t mean Russell intended to use
them to cause harm. Goldstein said his client was traumatized by the
deaths of his roommates and already suffered from mental health issues.
Family members said Russell was just a follower looking for community
and trying to please his friends.
Russell ultimately pleaded guilty to possession of an unregistered
destructive device and improper storage of explosive materials. He was
sentenced in 2018 to serve five years in prison. During the sentencing
hearing, a federal judge in Tampa expressed explicit concern that
Russell could fall in with the wrong crowd behind bars.
Several years later, federal investigators discovered his relationship
with Clendaniel, who similarly had a long history of white supremacist
beliefs.
She and Russell began exchanging letters around 2018 while they were
incarcerated in different facilities. They developed a romantic
relationship that continued after they were released from prison, court
records show.
Clendaniel, 36, pleaded guilty to plotting the attack and was sentenced
in September to 18 years in prison.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |