Florida White Supremacist Had 'Minuscule Amount' Of Explosives, His Lawyer Says

After his friend Devon Arthurs apparently killed two of their roommates, 21-year-old white supremacist Brandon Russell was pulled into the investigation, which led police to arrest him Sunday on suspicion of possessing bomb-making materials, a claim his lawyer denies.

The materials were found in Russell’s Tampa apartment Friday after police discovered the bodies of 18-year-old Andrew Oneschuk and 22-year-old Jeremy Himmelman. Police say Arthurs, the fourth roommate, confessed to killing the two men, claiming they were neo-Nazis who disrespected his recent conversion to Islam.

“[Police] allege that among the chemicals located was ‘more than a pound of ammonium nitrate,’” Ian J. Goldstein, Russell’s attorney, told HuffPost on Wednesday. “According to experts I’ve consulted with, this is a relatively minuscule amount of ammonium nitrate.”

Russell, a Florida National Guardsman, is accused of possessing not only ammonium nitrate but also other bomb-making materials and chemicals. Ammonium nitrate was one of the ingredients used by Timothy McVeigh in the 1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City, which claimed the lives of more than 150 people. That bomb required about half a ton of ammonium nitrate.

Police said Arthurs told them he shot his roommates also because “he wanted to prevent them from committing planned acts of domestic terrorism,” Assistant State Attorney Ronald Gale wrote in a pretrial motion filed in Florida’s Hillsborough County Circuit Court.

Arthurs told police “his two deceased roommates, along with … Russell, were neo-Nazis,” authorities said.

Questioned by police about the explosives, Russell told investigators they belonged to him. He said he was part of a college engineering club in 2013 and that he’d used hexamethylene triperoxide diamine (HMTD) to boost homemade rockets and to send balloons into the atmosphere, police said.

A bomb squad technician disagreed and said the chemical is “too energetic and volatile” for the types of uses described by Russell, according to court documents. Other chemicals found at the apartment included potassium chlorate, potassium nitrate, nitro methane, hexamine and citric acid.

The Tampa Bay Times on Tuesday interviewed Anthony May, a retired Army bomb squad member who now runs Arizona-based ALM Security and Explosives Consultant. May agreed with the technician’s assessment and said the amount of materials found at the apartment “could do significant damage.”

However, Goldstein says experts he’s consulted say his client had “nowhere near enough” chemicals to “create a device of the nature and magnitude that has been speculated about by the media.”

HuffPost on Wednesday interviewed Rick Lind, an associate professor at the University of Florida’s department of mechanical and aerospace engineering, and Jim Redyke, a demolitions expert at Dykon Demolition in Bixby, Oklahoma.

Lind said that, while some of the chemicals found at the apartment could potentially be used for launching rockets, they would be unlikely choices.

“I don’t think they would be a logical choice because there are much safer compounds,” Lind said. “I don’t know why you would choose to use those. It seems doubtful.”

Ammonium nitrate as it appears when sold as fertilizer. (Photo: PA Archive/PA Images)
Ammonium nitrate as it appears when sold as fertilizer. (Photo: PA Archive/PA Images)

Redyke said the chemicals and components found at the apartment are “all the stuff you need to make the bad stuff.”

“Ammonium nitrate itself is fertilizer, but when combined with that stuff it can be nasty,” Redyke said. “You can certainly make an explosive device out of that stuff, and while a pound or two is not that much, it’s still enough [to be destructive] in the right place and under the right circumstances.”

In response to Arthurs’ statement that his three roommates planned to use the explosives in terrorist plots, authorities say they have other evidence that points to Russell’s intent.

Prior to his arrest, Russell “admitted to his neo-Nazi beliefs,” and authorities found “Nazi/white supremacist propaganda” and a “framed photograph” of McVeigh, court documents state.

Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today.

Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh was executed on June 11, 2001, at the federal penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana. (Photo: BOB DAEMMRICH/AFP/Getty Images)
Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh was executed on June 11, 2001, at the federal penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana. (Photo: BOB DAEMMRICH/AFP/Getty Images)

Investigators also claim that monitors worn by bomb technicians identified radiation sources, including thorium and americium, in the apartment. No additional details on those chemicals were available Thursday. Court documents do not elaborate on the discovery, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Florida did not respond to a request for comment.

Russell was charged with possessing an unregistered destructive device and unlawful storage of explosive material. He is being held at a federal detention center in Miami.

Arthurs faces a number of charges, including two counts of first-degree murder. He is being held without bond at the Hillsborough County Jail.

Devon Arthurs, 18, faces a number of charges, including two counts of first-degree murder, in Tampa, Florida. (Photo: Tampa Police Department)
Devon Arthurs, 18, faces a number of charges, including two counts of first-degree murder, in Tampa, Florida. (Photo: Tampa Police Department)

Authorities have not accused Oneschuk and Himmelman of being involved in any illicit activities. It’s also unclear whether they were neo-Nazis, as claimed by Arthurs. Himmelman’s sister, Lyssa Himmelman, told Miami’s NBC 6 that her brother disagreed with Arthurs’ views.

“Jeremy was just too kindhearted to think people like Devon and Brandon could do something like this,” she said. “He never saw that.”

David Lohr covers crime and missing persons. Tips? Feedback? Send an email or follow him on Twitter.

Related...

Former Neo-Nazi Says It’s On White People To Fight White Supremacy

Former Neo-Nazi Tells Cops He Killed 2 Friends Who 'Disrespected' His New Islamic Faith

Also on HuffPost

Bullying

Even kids who share the same identity -- be it racial or gender -- can be guilty of bullying and discrimination against each other. Ontario's Ministry of Education defines bullying as "a form of repeated, persistent, and aggressive behaviour directed at an individual or individuals that is intended to cause (or should be known to cause) fear and distress and/or harm to another person's body, feelings, self-esteem, or reputation."

Cyberbullying

Social media can be a platform for bullying to continue even after school is out. Cyberbullying occurs when young people take malicious actions online. through chat rooms, email, social sites and instant messaging.
Social media can be a platform for bullying to continue even after school is out. Cyberbullying occurs when young people take malicious actions online. through chat rooms, email, social sites and instant messaging.

Stock Answer To 'What Are You?'

"You don't need to go into full confessional mode, but have fun with it, if that helps. Or be perfectly honest," author Jonathan R. Miller said. Miller writes e-books with multi-ethnic characters and themes. You don't have to talk about all the nuances of your family tree every time you're asked about your background, he said. That can be exhausting. Find something that works for you personally.

Real Answer To 'What Are You?'

"I like the word 'mixed' because it's a messy word, and in my experience growing up mixed is exactly that," Miller said. He suggests that it's important to allow yourself to truly wrestle with questions of identity in environments you consider safe.
"I like the word 'mixed' because it's a messy word, and in my experience growing up mixed is exactly that," Miller said. He suggests that it's important to allow yourself to truly wrestle with questions of identity in environments you consider safe.

A Friend To Confide In

If you are struggling with your identity, you don't have to tell the whole world, but confide in a friend that you trust. Having someone to confide in is important. "If you can, find someone who you can talk to about your most honest, ever-evolving, often-messy answer to the question, 'What am I?'" Miller said.
If you are struggling with your identity, you don't have to tell the whole world, but confide in a friend that you trust. Having someone to confide in is important. "If you can, find someone who you can talk to about your most honest, ever-evolving, often-messy answer to the question, 'What am I?'" Miller said.

If You Can't Speak, Write

"Maybe you don't have anyone trustworthy to talk to honestly about your experiences. Write about them. It helped me, sometimes, to get those out," Miller said.  It may not make a lot of sense initially and it might feel uncomfortably personal, but write. Keep a journal, write short stories and rename the characters, try your hand at poetry -- whatever feels best.

Let Your Identity Be An Open Question

"You are likely being told at different times, more or less, to hurry up and get off the fence, pick a side and get on with it," Miller said. It's not necessarily a bad thing to be unsure of who you are, even if your peers seem to have their acts together, he said. Teenage years are discovery years. Miller also quoted author Rainer Maria Rilke: "'Have patience with everything that remains unsolved in your heart. ... Live in the question.' That's good advice. Difficult to follow, but good."

Embrace The Chameleon

When it comes to mixed heritage, "you don't have to be 'both' or 'other' or 'all of the above' all of the time. Sometimes the only way to figure out what you are is to choose one thing and be it for a while," Miller said.  Explore how it feels to fully embrace a single aspect of your identity, for short period of time. See "what stick and what slides off." It's simply learning, Miller said.

Don't Be Afraid To Abandon The Labels Altogether

"I can't tell you how many multi-racial people I've met who have chosen a single race or ignored race entirely and been perfectly content with the decision. A biracial friend of mine used to tell me, 'I'm black and white, yes, but I'm black. Period,'" Miller said. He said he knows many people have chosen to identify with only one aspect of their multi-background, while others have embraced the blend.

Get Involved In Life

Find creative ways to occupy your time, Miller said. Join a group or do an activity (with others) where you are empowered to be who you are, instead of having to act how others think you need to be in order to fit in.
Find creative ways to occupy your time, Miller said. Join a group or do an activity (with others) where you are empowered to be who you are, instead of having to act how others think you need to be in order to fit in.

Be Proud Of Who You Are

Take pride in your ethnic (culture, color or religion) heritage. You have no control over your heritage, and you can't change that fact that this is who you are. So embrace it and learn as much as you can. "You may feel like it would be an insult to your heritage to embrace one aspect of yourself above the others, but trust me, it wouldn't be. This is important: it is not your job to uphold, with perfect equity and grace, all of the elements that went into your making," Miller said.

Have A Ready Defense Against The Identity Police

"Often they're the 'gatekeepers' that decide whether you're 'in' or 'out.'  But what you can do is have a ready answer for the 'charges' they level against you. Whether you use humour, earnestness, or self-righteous anger, it helps to have your defense lined up and ready," Miller said.      Sometimes people think all the "members" of their cultural or ethnic community must behave, dress and think a certain way. But as an individual, you can do whatever you want and find your own identity.

This article originally appeared on HuffPost.