Bryan Perry and Jonathan O’Dell allegedly tried to kill feds
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Title 42 rescinding at Tijuana, San Diego U.S.-Mexico border

Immigrants continue to cross the border fence despite the tight air and ground surveillance of Border Patrol elements. (Photo by Carlos Moreno/Sipa USA)

Two right-wing militia members conspired to go “to war with border patrol,” plotting to murder immigrants and federal authorities, a grand jury alleged in an indictment.

The duo — Bryan C. Perry, 37, of Clarksville, Tennessee, and Jonathan S. O’Dell, 33, of Warsaw, Missouri — styled themselves as members of the 2nd American Militia, and their alleged scheme collapsed after they got into a shootout with FBI agents who arrested them on the eve of their planned trip to the U.S.-Mexico border, prosecutors said.

Their most recent indictment alleges a combined total of 44 charges, and a conviction on the top count alone can lead to a sentence of life imprisonment.

Prosecutors say that the men promoted their scheme on TikTok.

In one of those videos, posted on Sept. 12, 2022, Perry claimed that the U.S. Border Patrol had been committing treason by allowing undocumented immigrants to enter into the United States — and said that the penalty for treason was death.

The next day, Perry took to TikTok again to say he was “ready to go to war against this government.”

Later that month, Perry recruited O’Dell, prosecutors say.

The indictment states that their plans heated up that October.

On Oct. 3, 2022, Perry had a phone conversation with an unidentified individual and described a plan to shoot immigrants and “federal agents” who would oppose them, according to the indictment. After he would “take a couple of ’em out,” Perry added that they swipe their gear and supplies, prosecutors said.

Some four days later on Oct. 4, 2022, Perry and O’Dell allegedly acquired a staggering stockpile of weapons: “six firearms, 23 magazines filled with ammunition, 1,770 rounds of various other ammunition, two sets of body armor with corresponding plate carrier vests, a handheld radio, two sniper rests, two gas masks, two items that appeared to be ballistic helmets, and multiple containers of a binary explosive mixture commonly sold as an exploding target,” the Justice Department says.

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