Teenage neo-Nazi admits terror offences
- Published
A teenage neo-Nazi who suggested Prince Harry should be shot for marrying a woman of mixed race has pleaded guilty to terror offences at the Old Bailey.
Michal Szewczuk, 19, of Leeds, admitted two counts of encouraging terrorism and five of possessing documents useful to a terrorist.
The charges relate to a neo-Nazi group called the Sonnenkrieg Division.
Co-defendant Oskar Dunn-Koczorowski, 18, from west London, pleaded guilty in December to encouraging terrorism.
Both of them were granted conditional bail and are due to be sentenced at the Old Bailey on 17 June.
The pair produced Sonnenkrieg propaganda that, among other things, said Prince Harry was a "race traitor" who should be shot and lionised the Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik.
They publicised the propaganda on the social media site Gab, including on a page for the Sonnenkrieg group itself.
Szewczuk, hiding behind a pseudonym, also used a separate account to posts links to self-authored diatribes that called for the "systematic slaughtering" of women and the rape of babies.
Detectives found Szewczuk in possession of bomb-making instructions, documents describing how to conduct Islamist terror attacks, and a "white resistance" manual.
The Sonnenkrieg group, which was exposed last year by a BBC investigation, was created as a British version of the American neo-Nazi organisation Atomwaffen Division, which has been linked to five murders.
Szewczuk and Dunn-Koczorowski were arrested the morning after the BBC investigation was broadcast. At the time, Szewczuk was a university student in Portsmouth.
Another man was also arrested and has since been released under investigation.
The group's ideology, which is influenced by figures such as the murderous cult leader Charles Manson, is a strain of neo-Nazism that openly encourages criminality and acts of terrorism.
Online propaganda and private chat logs show members engaging in extreme misogyny, as well as exalting jihadist terrorism and a violent strand of Satanism.
Some private messages seen by the BBC suggest Sonnenkrieg members encouraged young women to engage in acts of self-harm.
The Sonnenkrieg Division grew out of a split in the now largely defunct System Resistance Network, which was created after the neo-Nazi group National Action was banned under anti-terror laws in 2016.
Sonnenkrieg and System Resistance Network both contained one-time members of National Action, including Dunn-Koczorowski.
- Published5 December 2018
- Published20 December 2018