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Durham neo-Nazi teenager convicted of planning terror attack | Durham neo-Nazi teenager convicted of planning terror attack |
(32 minutes later) | |
A teenage neo-Nazi who wrote about an "inevitable race war" in his diary and identified a series of possible targets has been convicted of preparing terrorist acts. | A teenage neo-Nazi who wrote about an "inevitable race war" in his diary and identified a series of possible targets has been convicted of preparing terrorist acts. |
The 16-year-old boy listed the locations from his home city of Durham in his "guerrilla warfare" manual. | |
He also described himself as a "natural sadist", Manchester Crown Court heard. | |
The boy is the youngest person to be convicted of planning a terrorist attack in the UK. | The boy is the youngest person to be convicted of planning a terrorist attack in the UK. |
A jury found the boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, guilty of preparation of terrorist acts between October 2017 and March this year. | |
He was also convicted of disseminating a terrorist publication, possessing an article for a purpose connected to terrorism and three counts of possessing documents useful to someone preparing acts of terrorism. | |
He was remanded in custody and will be sentenced on 7 January. | |
The court heard the boy began drafting a "manual for practical sensible guerrilla warfare against the Jewish system in Durham City area". | |
The manual listed "means of attack" and "areas to attack", which listed local venues "worth attacking" such as post offices, pubs and schools. | The manual listed "means of attack" and "areas to attack", which listed local venues "worth attacking" such as post offices, pubs and schools. |
A "things to do" list from August 2018 included the words "shed empathy" alongside a hand-drawn symbol of the Order of Nine Angles, which the court heard was a "self-consciously, explicitly malevolent" Satanic organisation. | A "things to do" list from August 2018 included the words "shed empathy" alongside a hand-drawn symbol of the Order of Nine Angles, which the court heard was a "self-consciously, explicitly malevolent" Satanic organisation. |
The boy also wrote of planning to conduct an arson spree with Molotov cocktails on local synagogues. | |
Jurors heard, in the course of his internet searches, he looked for a "map of synagogues in the UK" and "Newcastle synagogue". | |
He also visited websites on firearms and was in communication with a gun auctioneer. | He also visited websites on firearms and was in communication with a gun auctioneer. |
After his arrest in March, police found him in possession of instructions showing to make bombs and the poison ricin. | |
They also found he had distributed firearms manuals online by uploading them to a neo-Nazi website. | |
Giving evidence, the boy denied being a neo-Nazi and said he had merely created an extremist "persona" online and in his journal. |