Train incident leads to terrorism charges against man FBI says is white supremacist - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 04:48 AM | Calgary | -17.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Train incident leads to terrorism charges against man FBI says is white supremacist

An armed white supremacist accused of stopping an Amtrak train in Nebraska has been charged with terrorism.

Taylor Wilson was armed and behaving erratically when he stopped an Amtrak train, authorities say

An armed white supremacist accused of stopping an Amtrak train in Nebraska has been charged with terrorism.

Documents unsealed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Lincoln show 26-year-old Taylor Wilson, of St. Charles, Mo., is charged with terrorism attacks and other violence against railroad carriers and mass transportation systems.

The eastbound California Zephyr with about 175 people aboard halted early Oct. 22 in Oxford, Neb., about 320 kilometres southwest of Omaha. The train was headed to Chicago from California.

Wilson had entered a restricted area of the train and enabled the emergency brake in an attempt to derail the train, authorities said.

Passengers sat in darkness for more than an hour after the train suddenly stopped, according to passenger Bobbie Garris.

"We lunged forward in our seats and all the power went out, it went completely black," Garris said. "We could smell something burning and I'm going to guess that was the brakes."

Amtrak staff searched the train and discovered Wilson in the engineer's seat of the follow engine, where he was behaving erratically and playing with the controls. A Furnas County deputy sent to the scene found Amtrak employees holding Wilson, court documents said. Wilson had a loaded revolver, plus more ammunition and a knife, the deputy said.

No injuries were reported.

The court documents show the FBI has evidence of Wilson's activities with white supremacist groups, including a business card for the National Socialist Movement in Detroit, a neo-Nazi group.

In the court documents, according to NBC News, a cousin of the suspect said Wilson travelled to the Charlottesville, Va., rally in August that prompted a national outcry for its heated and protests and fatal incident in which a woman was run over by a vehicle.

FBI agents searched Wilson's home in December and found a tactical vest, 15 firearms, ammunition and white supremacy documents and paperwork.

Wilson has been ruled competent to stand trial.

He was arrested Dec. 23 and is now in federal custody.

The Associated Press left a message for his attorney in a related case Friday.

With files from CBC News