O9A Order of the Nine Angles Satanic Murder Cult PROTECTED by UK Home Office

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O9A Order of the Nine Angles Satanic Murder Cult PROTECTED by UK Home Office

Post by TonyGosling »

How NYC gun arrest uncovered a huge pedophile Satanic cult

https://nypost.com/2023/09/28/nyc-mans- ... hile-cult/
By Social Links for Olivia Land
Published Sep. 28, 2023, 10:45 a.m. ET
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The arrest of a Queens man on gun charges two years ago has led federal authorities to the discovery of a Satanic pedophile extortion cult that targets minors over the internet, a report said Thursday.

Investigators uncovered the heinous group, named 764, while probing disturbing social media posts made by Angel Almeida, 23, who was busted in November 2021 and charged with being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm, according to court documents and a report from The Guardian.

In February, Brooklyn federal prosecutors announced they had filed a superseding indictment against Almeida, adding charges related to child exploitation and enticement of minors.

Prior to Almeida’s arrest, the FBI followed anonymous tips that allegedly linked him to social media accounts containing vile posts about child sex abuse — including one Instagram profile, “@necropedocell,” that featured a photo of what appeared to be a child bound and gagged.

A post on another of Almeida’s alleged Instagram profiles showed him posing with ammunition strapped to his chest, in front of a black flag bearing the logo of the Order of Nine Angels (O9A), which prosecutors described as “a worldwide Satanist … group which embraces elements of neo-Nazism and white supremacy.”
Angel Almeida was arrested in November 2021. 4
Angel Almeida was arrested in November 2021. Department of Justice

When authorities searched Almeida’s home, they allegedly found hundreds of files containing child sex abuse material on four different devices — as well as books related to O9A and Satanism, according to court documents.

They also found a “blood covenant,” an O9A drawing of a hooded figure surrounded by the group’s symbols and smeared with what appears to be blood, the filings state.

On Sept. 12, the FBI issued a public notice about 764, a “violent online group” that is “deliberately targeting minor victims on publicly available messaging platforms to extort them into recording or livestreaming acts of self-harm and producing child sexual abuse material.”

Sources told the Guardian the cult is believed to be an offshoot of O9A — and that law enforcement discovered the group through the investigation in Almeida’s case.
Almeida posted photos of firearms on social media, which led to his arrest. 4
Prior to Almeida’s arrest, the FBI followed anonymous tips that allegedly linked him to social media accounts containing vile posts about child sex abuse

The FBI did not immediately return The Post’s request for a comment on Thursday.

Members of 764 are thought to “use threats, blackmail and manipulation” to get vulnerable youth — particularly LGBTQ+ minors, racial minorities and those with mental health issues — to record acts of self-harm, animal abuse, sex acts and suicide, the FBI warning states.

The group targets victims through platforms like Roblox, Discord and Twitch, as well as curated Soundcloud playlists and the encrypted messaging app Telegram, researchers told the Guardian.

There are likely thousands of 764 members, with hundreds more active members trawling these platforms regularly, they added.
Almeida also had a bizarre cultish drawing and books in his home. 4
Almeida also had a bizarre cultish drawing and books in his home.

Though the FBI warning earlier this month marked the first time US law enforcement publicly mentioned 764, the circle has already made headlines overseas: A German teen accused of killing his Romanian foster family is believed to have been a participant, according to Romanian daily newspaper Libertatea.

The teenager had swastika and “764” tattoos, as well as “necro” — the same word Almeida used in one of his Instagram usernames — inked on his forearm, the outlet noted.

In addition to possession of child pornography, Almeida is accused of attempting to lure two underage girls into sexual activity — one of whom he allegedly targeted for the purpose of producing and disseminating child sex abuse material, the February indictment reads.

“As alleged, Almeida posed multiple threats to our community, not only as a felon in possession of a firearm, but also through targeting children as victims of sexual abuse,” FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Michael Driscoll said in a statement at the time.
In another social media photo, Almeida posed in front of an O9A flag. 4
In another social media photo, Almeida posed in front of a flag for O9A, “a worldwide Satanist” group. Department of Justice

At a recent appearance in Brooklyn federal court, Almedia — who previously served 18 months behind bars in Florida on burglary charges — scoffed at the serious allegations against him.

“What the f–k do you even call a minor? You tell me what’s a minor,” he ranted when Judge Rachel P. Kovner detailed the content of the attempted child exploitation charges.

Earlier in the proceedings, Almeida claimed that he was diagnosed “with schizophrenic bipolar disorder” in 2018, but had never been medicated for the condition.
What do you think? Post a comment.

After a lengthy evaluation process, Almeida was found competent to stand trial earlier this month. The trial is set to begin on Dec. 4.

If convicted, he faces a maximum penalty of life in prison.

Almeida’s counsel, Benjamin Silverman, did not return The Post’s request for a comment.
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Re: O9A Order of the Nine Angles Satanic Murder Cult PROTECTED by UK Home Office

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UK Nazi Satanist group should be outlawed, campaigners urge
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51682760

Published

2 March 2020

Sketch drawn by the defendantImage source, COUNTER TERRORISM POLICING NORTH EAST
Image caption,
A 16-year-old boy who cited the group as an influence was jailed this year for planning a terror attack
By Daniel De Simone
BBC News

A British neo-Nazi Satanist group should be outlawed by the government as a terrorist organisation, according to a report from anti-racism campaigners.

Hope Not Hate has used its annual State of Hate report to call for the Order of Nine Angles (ONA) to be banned.

The Home Office said the list of proscribed terrorist groups was kept "under review."

Last week two British extreme right-wing organisations were added their number.

One of them - Sonnenkrieg Division - was influenced by the ONA's Nazi-Satanist ideology, a supernatural worldview that encourages the disruption of society through violence, criminality and sexual offending.

In the past year four teenagers linked to the ideology have been jailed in the UK for terror offences, with one of them convicted of preparing for a terror attack by - among other things - trying to alter himself in line with instructions set out in ONA texts.

In court, prosecutors described the organisation as "self-consciously, explicitly malevolent" and the "most prominent and recognisable link between Satanism and the extreme right."

Hope not Hate's report says the occult organisation - thought to have been founded in the 1970s - has become increasingly prominent online, noting that its "terminology and trappings have taken on lives of their own, adopted into the lexicon of the wider terroristic far-right."

The anti-racist campaign group, which investigates violent extremism, argues that the group's "sick ideas have drawn in young extremists in the UK and elsewhere, and have helped nourish a dangerous culture of unprecedented depravity amongst the extreme right, which has none of the moral constraints that previous generations of far-right activists had."
Yvette CooperImage source, Reuters
Image caption,
Yvette Cooper says the ONA's activities are "particularly troubling"

Yvette Cooper MP, chair of the home affairs select committee, said the home secretary "should immediately" refer the ONA to the government's proscription review group.

"The combination of Nazi-Satanism, extreme violence and sexual abuse makes it particularly troubling and action needs to be taken to prevent them grooming and radicalising other people," she said.

A Home Office spokesperson said action was being taken to "root out and dismantle the groups that promote extreme right-wing views and we are giving police the tools and resources they need to tackle this threat."

The spokesperson added: "We keep the list of proscribed organisations under review."

Counter-terrorism police have previously spoken about the increasing amount of work relating to "niche ideologies" such as violent Satanism.
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Re: O9A Order of the Nine Angles Satanic Murder Cult PROTECTED by UK Home Office

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Calls grow for ban on Nazi-Satanist group
https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/u ... ist-group/

Order of Nine Angles linked to murders and ritualised violence
Danyal Hussein in police custody. Reuters

Danyal Hussein in police custody. Reuters
Thomas Harding author image
Thomas Harding
Sep 28, 2021
Powered by automated translation

An extremist Nazi-Satanist organisation linked to several murders should be immediately banned by the British government, politicians have told The National.

Calls to ban the Order of Nine Angles (ONA), which has been linked to extremist ideology and acts of murder, have so far fallen on deaf ears at the Home Office, which has powers to proscribe the group - making it a criminal offence for meetings and other activities. It still remains able to operate without restriction.

“The Order of Nine Angles advocate sexual violence that is really pretty brutal and misogynistic,” Stephanie Peacock, MP, told The National. “There's a lot of evidence that this is a very bad group that is pushing a really terrible ideology.”
Forensic police examine the scene after MP Jo Cox was murdered in 2016. Getty Images
Forensic police examine the scene after MP Jo Cox was murdered in 2016. Getty Images

Investigations have previously found that a teenager convicted of randomly murdering sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman in a London park last year was linked ONA. Material and a handwritten Satanic pact were found with Danyal Hussein, 19, who was convicted of the murders in July.

The ONA praises the Nazi era and rejects ethics, urging followers to violent acts to apparently open a gateway for evil energies. It has also praised extremist Islamist acts of mass murder.

The group has been active in Britain since the late 1960s but it appears that Covid-19 lockdowns have allowed its malign influence to prey online on vulnerable young men stuck at home.

A 16-year-old boy became the youngest person ever convicted of planning a terror attack in Britain last year with his actions swayed by ONA literature, the prosecution said.

There are growing concerns that the group has also established international foothold with cells in Germany, Sweden and more recently in America, where at least two serving soldiers have been convicted of violent acts in connection with the group.

“I can understand that the bar needs to be high when proscribing an organisation because you're effectively taking away someone's civil liberties,” Ms Peacock, the Barnsley East Labour MP said. “But the government has not given a reason why the organisation has not been proscribed. They seem to treat proscription like an endpoint not a beginning point but the whole point is, it's meant to be preventive.

“It’s hugely important that we tackle the Order of Nine Angles and I call on the government to take action and proscribe this organisation.”

The Home Secretary can use the law to proscribe a group if she believes it is involved in terror, that includes “promotions or encouragement of terrorism” but investigations are secretive.

“The Government does not routinely comment on whether an organisation is, or is not, being considered for proscription,” a Home Office spokesman said.
“The Order of Nine Angles advocate sexual violence that is really pretty brutal and misogynistic,” said Stephanie Peacock, MP. Photo: UK Parliament
“The Order of Nine Angles advocate sexual violence that is really pretty brutal and misogynistic,” said Stephanie Peacock, MP. Photo: UK Parliament

Ms Peacock, who has been joined Yvette Cooper, MP in seeking an ONA ban, was speaking after a Labour conference fringe event on “The Threat of the International Far Right” hosted by the Hope Not Hate campaign.

Labour MP Jo Cox was murdered by a far right extremist in 2016.
Read More
Far right still a growing threat five years after UK politician Jo Cox’s murder by neo-Nazi

Far right conspiracy forums “exploded” during the pandemic with the spread of the QAnon conspiracy theory of Satanist cults that has had a significant impact in America, said Joe Mulhall of Hope Not Hate.

“While this is shrinking as the lockdown has ended what we are seeing is the radicalisation of people and super conspiracies,” he said.

Populist politics, with figureheads such as Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil, was “resurgent, growing and becoming more established” allowing Far Right groups to become more established, he warned.
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Re: O9A Order of the Nine Angles Satanic Murder Cult PROTECTED by UK Home Office

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Durham teen neo-Nazi became 'living dead'

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tyne-50397477

22 November 2019

Sketch drawn by the defendantImage source, COUNTER TERRORISM POLICING NORTH EAST


The boy denied being a neo-Nazi, saying his writings were an extremist "alter ego"
By Daniel De Simone
BBC News

The youngest person to be convicted of planning a terrorist attack in the UK identified potential targets in his hometown, began drafting a "guerrilla warfare" manual and tried to obtain a chemical used in terrorist bombings. But the case also focused on the radicalisation process itself, hearing the 16-year-old's preparations for an attack involved a deliberate effort to dehumanise himself and become like the "living dead".

The teenager chronicled his regression in a journal, writing "at one point or another I can look back and see if I was any different." Aged 14, he noted: "I wasn't always a fascist, my red pilling process was slower than most", adding that less than two years earlier he advocated "punk rock ideals and Marxism".

The trial heard much about his ideology: an amalgam of neo-Nazism, Satanism and misanthropy, allied to the belief that a collapse of civilisation should be "accelerated" through acts of violence and criminality.

He was first interviewed by police in autumn 2017, when his school reported a Twitter account he used to express support for the outlawed British neo-Nazi group National Action and pose for a photo with ex-English Defence League leader, Tommy Robinson.

The boy, who cannot be identified because of his age, promised to close the profile and spent time with the government de-radicalisation scheme, Prevent. But, rather than moderating his behaviour, he set out to immerse himself in extreme right-wing literature and online networks.

"A fascist has an obligation to absorb a lot of words," he recorded.
List written by the defendant of areas to attackImage source, COUNTER TERRORISM POLICING NORTH EAST
Image caption,

One handwritten note included potential targets in Durham
Presentational white space

His immersion came at a time of exceptional depravity. National Action had been banned in 2016, but generated several small British spin-offs, some of which sought to imitate the militant American group, Atomwaffen Division.

The origins of this network were in an online neo-Nazi forum, but by the time it closed in 2017 fascists from around the world were already migrating to new platforms. These digital spaces promote an increasingly berserk world view that proclaims hatred of all, worships a pantheon of "saints" comprising various terrorists and murderers, and demands a commitment to the destruction of society through so-called "accelerationism".

Online channels can gain thousands of followers, all using a shared vocabulary and set of references, although there are disputes over people's ideological commitment or supernatural beliefs, in which Adolf Hitler is often regarded as a divinity.

Central influences include the American neo-Nazi James Mason, who has been convicted of indecent images offences involving a child, and several individuals associated with the occult organisation Order of Nine Angles - described by the prosecution as the "most prominent and recognisable link between Satanism and the extreme right".

The result is a culture in which deviancy and criminality are encouraged - sexual violence and paedophilia are constant themes - with anything justified as long as it is thought to destabilise society and defy what is characterised as slavish morality.
Propaganda image taken from Telegram of Atomwaffen DivisionImage source, Propaganda image
Image caption,

Some British spin-off groups sought to imitate militant American group Atomwaffen Division

The Durham teenager absorbed these ideas, reading any recommended books and discussing them in his journal, gradually following the logic of his ideology towards a planned attack. In October 2018, he wrote that earlier phases of his political activities, such as debating with others, had "accomplished nothing" and merely got him into trouble at school.

"And now here I am an accelerationist," he added.

The boy actively sought to alter himself in line with the texts he read, including the instruction "shed empathy" on a list of things to do. He adopted an online pseudonym, speaking constantly with other neo-Nazis, telling a forum that his Satanic belief system involved programming oneself to lose any feelings of guilt, becoming the living dead in the process.

"I believe there is primal enjoyment to be had in sadism," he wrote in his journal, stating: "How wonderful it is to be an amoral individual".

He searched for synagogues around the UK, wrote a list of local places in Durham "worth attacking", collected explosives manuals, and tried to secure a dangerous chemical from a fellow extremist in the USA.

When the boy was arrested outside his home in March, detectives found a coded note in his pocket, saying: "Killing is probably easier than your paranoid mind thinks. You're just not used to it. Most were caught because they got sloppy."
Handwritten Storm 88 coverImage source, COUNTER TERRORISM POLICING NORTH EAST
Image caption,

The boy had started writing a "guerrilla warfare" manual
Presentational white space

At trial, the boy denied being a neo-Nazi, saying his writings were an extremist "alter ego" created in order to shock others and find a sense of belonging online, ultimately generated by his feelings of social isolation. He told jurors his political beliefs were "centre right" and that he had a poster on his bedroom wall signed by Nigel Farage.

Prosecutors said the boy was lying to the jury about the fake "persona" and that his actions were not confined to diaries or the internet. They originally alleged that he sexually touched a child as part of his preparations for an attack, saying it was a deliberate "desensitisation technique", although claims about his sexual conduct were ruled inadmissible during pre-trial hearings.
Teens Jacek Tchorzewski, Michal Szewczuk and Oskar Dunn-KoczorowskiImage source, Met Police and PA
Image caption,

Teenagers Jacek Tchorzewski, Michal Szewczuk and Oskar Dunn-Koczorowski were jailed this year for terror offences linked to the same ideological influences

According to police, eight terrorist plots inspired by right-wing ideologies have been stopped since March 2017. They say there is a "spectrum" of such ideologies that have the potential to generate violence, with the variant finally adopted by the Durham defendant regarded as perhaps the most extreme of all.

He is now the fourth teenager convicted of terrorism offences in the UK over the past year in which the same set of influences - accelerationism and Satanism - have been central.

One of the many troubling aspects of this case is that a child traversed the full spectrum of right-wing extremism before he had even left school.
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Re: O9A Order of the Nine Angles Satanic Murder Cult PROTECTED by UK Home Office

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Neo-nazi satanist jailed for encouraging girls to kill themselves

Tom Sanders

https://metro.co.uk/2025/01/16/neo-nazi ... -22378021/

Published January 16, 2025 6:30pm Updated January 16, 2025 6:30pm

Neo-Nazi satanist Cameron Finnigan was jailed for encouraging suicide online and possessing terror material (Picture: PA)

A satanic neo-Nazi has been jailed for six years for encouraging girls to kill themselves and self-harm.

Cameron Finnigan, 19, joined a satanic extremist group known as 764 in late 2023 and encouraged a girl to hang herself ‘for me’ so he could share footage of it in a group chat.

He was arrested in March 2024 and pleaded guilty to encouraging suicide, possessing terrorist documents and having indecent images of children.

The 764 group has links to the Order of Nine Angles, a Nazi occultist group linked to a series of crimes.

Finnigan, who also suffered with a number of mental health problems, communicated with other 764 members on the Telegram, Discord and Snapchat apps.

One of his usernames was ACID and he used a Pin code of 1969, the date the Satanic Bible was first published.

He chatted to an individual believed to be a young girl who told him she was considering suicide.

Finnigan encouraged her to hang herself using a rope and wanted her to stream it online so he could claim it for 764, the Old Bailey was told.

Prosecutor Bill Emlyn Jones KC said Finnigan, who was said to be autistic and lived with his adoptive mother, father and biological sister in Horsham, West Sussex, became involved with 764 in October or November 2023.

The judge also heard that Finnegan told the group he was planning to kill a homeless person living in a tent near his home as part of a ‘terror week’ advertised bythe group which encouraged members to engage in a ‘campaign of violence’.

Police never found evidence of an attempt to kill the victim, but a picture of the tent was found in the chat alongside a message from the defendant that said, ‘I’m waiting’.
Undated handout photo issued by Counter Terrorism Policing South East of Neo-Nazi satanist Cameron Finnigan, 19, who has been jailed at the Old Bailey for six years with an extended licence period of three years after admitting he encouraged girls to kill themselves and self-harm online. Issue date: Thursday January 16, 2025. PA Photo. See PA story COURTS Finnigan. Photo credit should read: Counter Terrorism Policing South East/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Finnigan was a member of neo-nazi group 764 (Picture: PA Wire)
Undated handout photo issued by Counter Terrorism Policing South East of a flag found in the house of Neo-Nazi satanist Cameron Finnigan, 19, has been jailed at the Old Bailey for six years with an extended licence period of three years after admitting he encouraged girls to kill themselves and self-harm online. Issue date: Thursday January 16, 2025. PA Photo. See PA story COURTS Finnigan. Photo credit should read: Counter Terrorism Policing South East/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Police found neo-nazi symbols and a satanic flag in Finnigan’s home (Picture: PA Wire)

Finnigan also accessed an 11-page terrorist document which provided advice on how to carry out ‘truck attacks’, giving instructions on the type of vehicle and ideal targets.

He was arrested last March on suspicion of threats to kill and possession of a firearm, although despite claims made to 764 members online, there was no evidence that he ever had a gun.

Searches of his home address revealed a large tapestry of the ‘Satanic Beast’ in his bedroom, knives, swastikas, and pentagrams associated with satanism.

A punchbag with a number of slash and stab marks was found outside his bedroom, the court was told.

Indecent images of children were found on his electronic devices as well as material bearing the 764 logo depicting murder, mutilation, rape and interference with a foetus.

The defendant had filmed himself carving words on to a car bonnet and puncturing the tyres with a large kitchen knife.

When asked during a police interview about encouraging the girl to kill herself, Finnigan said his only concern was ‘if she went through with it and I got caught’.
Undated handout photo issued by Counter Terrorism Policing South East of a knife found in the house of Neo-Nazi satanist Cameron Finnigan, 19, has been jailed at the Old Bailey for six years with an extended licence period of three years after admitting he encouraged girls to kill themselves and self-harm online. Issue date: Thursday January 16, 2025. PA Photo. See PA story COURTS Finnigan. Photo credit should read: Counter Terrorism Policing South East/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Finnigan filmed himself carving words on to a car bonnet and puncturing the tyres with a large knife (Picture: PA Wire)

When asked if he would have been concerned about ‘whether she was dead or not’, he responded: ‘I don’t think about stuff in that moment.’

The court also heard that he told police he felt ‘pretty confident that (she) would not commit suicide’.

Sentencing, Mr Justice Jay shared a psychological report which diagnosed Finnigan with a number of mental health issues but added they did not believe he exhibited core features of autistic spectrum disorder (ASD).

The judge handed Finnigan a sentence of six years in jail with an extended licence period of three years.

He added: ‘According to the pre-sentence report, the risk you pose is both indiscriminate and unpredictable, and I agree with that assessment.

‘I also wholly endorse the overarching assessment that you pose a high risk of serious harm to the public, including children.’
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