Brandon Russell is seen in this mugshot from the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office.
Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office via AP
An admitted neo-Nazi and a Maryland woman were arrested and charged with plotting to attack several electrical substations in the Baltimore area, federal authorities announced Monday.
Prosecutors said the admitted neo-Nazi, Brandon Clint Russell, 27, and 34-year-old Sarah Beth Clendaniel conspired to commit the attacks “in furtherance of Russell’s racially or ethnically motivated extremist beliefs.”
Russell is currently on supervised release after a federal conviction related to possessing an unregistered destructive device, which occurred after a former roommate told authorities that Russell’s neo-Nazi group was planning to attack electrical and nuclear power infrastructure in Florida.
Clendaniel allegedly boasted that if the electrical substations were all attacked on the same day, it “would completely destroy this whole city,” according to a newly unsealed criminal complaint against her and Russell.
A “good four or five shots through the center of them,” Clendaniel allegedly stated, according to the complaint.
A woman believed to be Sarah Beth Clendaniel in a DOJ document
Source: DOJ
Maryland U.S. Attorney Erek Barron in a statement said, “This planned attack threatened lives and would have left thousands of Marylanders in the cold and dark.”
“We are united and committed to using every legal means necessary to disrupt violence, including hate-fueled attacks,” Barron said.
Russell, who lives in Orlando, Florida, is due to appear in federal court in that city on the charges Monday afternoon.
Clendaniel, a resident of Catonsville, Maryland, is due to appear in Baltimore federal court on Monday afternoon.
Both defendants are charged with conspiring to destroy an energy facility. They face a maximum possible prison sentence of 20 years if convicted.
Russell had previously admitted to police in May 2017 to having started a local National Socialist group in Tampa, Florida, called the “Atomwaffen,” which included three of his roommates in that city, according to the criminal complaint.
That interview was conducted after Devon Arthurs, a roommate of Russell’s in Tampa, killed their two other roommates, the complaint said. Arthurs last year was ruled competent to stand trial in the killings. He remains held without bond in a Florida jail.
Arthurs told law enforcement authorities at the time “that he had recently converted from Neo-Nazi beliefs to Islam,” the complaint said. “Arthurs stated that he murdered his roommates because they bullied him over being a Muslim.”
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Arthurs also told authorities that “Russell was the leader of the Neo-Nazi group to which he and his roommates had belonged,” the complaint said.
“Arthurs stated that, before he killed his roommates, they had been planning to attack U.S. infrastructure, to include power lines along ‘Alligator Alley’ (a nickname for the part of Interstate 75 that crosses South Florida) as well as a Florida nuclear power plant.”
During the investigation of the killings, authorities found neo-Nazi paraphernalia, a picture of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh and “the highly explosive hexamethylene triperoxide diamine (“HMTD”) and, among other items, numerous explosive precursors that belonged to Russell,” according to the complaint.
Russell pleaded guilty to possession of an unregistered destructive device and improper storage of explosive materials, the complaint noted. He was sentenced to five years in prison.
Clendaniel has a criminal history that includes a conviction for felony robbery, the complaint said.
China’s CATL launched its new Bedrock Chassis on Monday, calling it “the world’s first ultra-safe skateboard chassis.” The global EV battery leader said its newest tech “activates a trillion yuan market” as the new standard for intelligent vehicle design. According to CATL, it will also end the belief that gas-powered cars are safer than EVs.
CATL launches the world’s first ultra-safe EV chassis
On December 24, CATL officially launched the new Bedrock Chassis with “outstanding” safety performance. The company proved it in a video presented during the launch event.
The video showed a prototype model’s front impact at 120 km/h (about 75 mph) without exploding or catching fire. CATL claims its newest tech “sets a new standard for intelligent chassis safety” with comprehensive protection across all scenarios and speed ranges.
According to CATL, the Bedrock Chassis passed the world’s first “highest speed +strongest impact” dual extreme safety test.
In China, the commonly used speed for frontal impact safety tests in the C-NCAP (China New Car Assessment Program) is 56 km/h (35 mph).
At that speed, the collision generates energy equivalent to falling from a 12-meter-high (39-foot) building. At 120 km/h, it’s like dropping 56 meters (183 feet). According to CATL, the collision energy is 4.6 times greater.
During the launch, Ni Jun, CATL’s chief manufacturing officer, said, “Safety is the core of CATL—it’s part of our DNA.”
A trillion yuan market
There has been no previous instance of a new energy vehicle (NEV) “daring to challenge a 120 km/h frontal pole impact test,” the company said during the event.
With a battery-centered design, CATL’s new Bedrock Chassis directly integrates the battery cells into the unit. The design enables it to absorb 85% of the vehicle’s collision energy compared to about 60% by a traditional chassis.
The unit features an “ultra-safe battery cell design,” disconnecting the high-voltage circuit instantly within 0.01 seconds. It will then complete the vehicle’s residual high-voltage energy discharge within 0.2 seconds, a new industry record.
CATL boasted that its new chassis design “paves the way for the industry,” but more importantly, “it also overturns the conventional belief that gasoline vehicles are safer than NEVs.”
The global EV battery leader claims its new Bedrock Chassis “activates a trillion yuan market” and will accelerate the shift toward modular, personalized, intelligent vehicle design. At the launch event, CATL revealed that AVATR will be the first automaker to use the new tech.
CATL is on a “never-ending journey” to create safer batteries and vehicles to accelerate the industry’s shift to EVs.
The news comes after CATL revealed ambitious plans to expand its EV battery swap network last week with its new “Chocolate” SEB batteries. CATL aims to phase out gas stations over the next few years as it rapidly expands battery swap stations across China.
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Construction at BYD’s new EV plant in Brazil was suddenly halted Monday after authorities found Chinese workers in “slavery-like” conditions. The workers were hired in China by another firm, and BYD has since cut ties.
Why construction at BYD’s EV plant in Brazil is halted
According to a statement from the Public Ministry of Labor (MPT), 163 workers at the construction site of BYD’s new EV plant in Salvador, Brazil, were “being held in conditions analogous to slavery.”
Construction on the site was halted on Monday after the findings. According to the authorities, Jinjiang Group, one of the contractors BYD hired to build the new EV plant, hired the workers in China.
BYD released a statement saying it has cut ties with Jinjiang and is assisting the victims as it works with Brazilian authorities. All workers will be transferred to hotels. They will not be able to work and will have their contracts terminated.
Alexandre Baldy, senior vice president of BYD Brazil, said the company remains “committed to full compliance with Brazilian legislation, especially with regard to the protection of workers’ rights and human dignity.”
The MPT statement detailed the extreme “slavery-like” worker conditions. For example, they had one bathroom for every 31 workers, forcing them to wake up at 4 am to get in line to be ready for work at 5:30 am. They slept without mattresses on the bed, and the kitchens operated in “alarming conditions.”
If a worker quit after six months, they would leave the country without any pay after factoring in the cost of a round-trip airplane ticket.
BYD said it has held a “detailed review” over the past few weeks. The Chinese EV giant asked Jinjiang several times to improve the conditions.
A joint virtual hearing of the MPT and MTE is scheduled for December 26. The MPT said the need for new “on-site inspections” has not been ruled out. BYD’s new EV plant is set to begin production next year. Check back soon for more updates on the situation.
BYD is already a top-selling EV brand in Brazil. In October, it launched its first pickup, the Shark PHEV. The pickup is BYD’s sixth vehicle in Brazil, joining other popular models like the Dolphin Mini (Seagull), Yuan Plus, and Dolphin.
Source: Bloomberg, Brazil Public Ministry of Labor
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