News
BHS | Feb 13, 2025

Bahamian Neo-Nazi leader found guilty in plot to attack Baltimore power grid

/ Our Today

administrator
Reading Time: 2 minutes
Bahamian-American extremist Brandon Russell. (Photo: CNN)

WASHINGTON (Reuters)

Bahamian-American neo-Nazi leader Brandon Russell, accused of plotting to attack Baltimore’s power grid last year, has been found guilty of conspiring to damage an energy facility, the US Justice Department said on February 5.

The 29-year-old, who currently hails from an Orlando address in Florida, and an associate were arrested in February 2023 after the FBI thwarted their plan with the help of a confidential informant.

Evidence presented at the six-day trial showed that between November 2022 and that month, Russell conspired to attack transformers within electrical substations “in furtherance of his racially or ethnically motivated violent extremist beliefs,” the Justice Department said in a statement.

Russell posted links to open-source infrastructure maps and described how a small number of attacks on substations could cause a “cascading failure,” the department said.

He recruited a Maryland-based woman, Sarah Beth Clendaniel, to carry out the attacks in order to interrupt and impair the power grid in Baltimore, Maryland’s largest city, the department said.

Clendaniel identified five substations to target and Russell attempted to secure a weapon for her. The planned attacks would have caused damage of more than US$75 million, the department said.

The cupola of Baltimore City Hall is seen amid the skyline in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. May 12, 2019. (Photo: REUTERS/Stephanie Keith/File)

Russell, a former member of the Florida National Guard, is a convicted felon and founder of a neo-Nazi group called the Atomwaffen Division that works toward “ushering in the collapse of civilization,” according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights organisation that tracks US hate groups.

According to local media reports, Russell is a dual citizen of the Bahamas and the United States. He is the grandson of Grand Bahamas businessman William Russell and formerly attended the elite St Andrew’s International School in the capital Nassau before tertiary studies at the University of South Florida.

He was previously sentenced to five years imprisonment in 2018 after pleading guilty to possession of an unregistered destruction device and the improper storage of explosive materials.

Russell is scheduled to be sentenced on June 17. He could face up to 20 years in prison.

Clendaniel was sentenced to 18 years in prison in September 2024.

Russell’s lawyers declined to comment on the verdict.

Comments

What To Read Next

News JAM Jan 22, 2026

Reading Time: 2 minutesA 25-year-old Portland man, who is being accused of being a serial rapist, has been arrested and charged by detectives from the Counter-Terrorism and Organised Crime Investigation Branch (C-TOC) in connection with a string of sexual offences committed across multiple parishes between 2023 and 2026.

Ackiel Davis, of Cornwall Barracks in Moore Town, who is out on bail regarding other cases, is being accused of obtaining explicit images and videos of women and young girls and using threats of exposure to force them to comply with his demands for sex, according to the police.