The prosecution of Matthews and other co-defendants is part of the U.S. Department of Justice’s mission of “preserving our nation’s security against domestic terrorist threats,” said Jonathan F. Lenzner, acting U.S. Attorney for Maryland, where Mathews pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court.
Mathews and other members of The Base “were assembling firearms and collecting thousands of rounds of ammunition with the intent to engage in serious criminal conduct,’’ Lenzner said. “There is simply no place in our country for racially motivated extremist groups that engage in violence.”
David Weiss, U.S. Attorney for Delaware, said that membership in a “violent extremist group” steeped in hatred and bigotry, while “despicable, is not a crime. But when extremists like Mathews take action in furtherance of their twisted agenda and commit firearms offenses, obstruct justice, and illegally transport aliens — law enforcement will respond swiftly and decisively.”
Reeves said that that since 2018, “The Base has built a coalition of white supremacist members within the United States and abroad through, among other things, online chat rooms, in-person meetings, propaganda, and military-style training.”
After learning in August 2019 that Mathews had crossed the border into the United States, Bilbrough and an unidentified co-conspirator traveled from Maryland to southern Michigan to pick him up, Reeves said. They took him first to Bilbrough’s home in Easton, then to the Chincoteague, Virginia area.
That September, Mathews was taken to Rome, Georgia, where he stayed for nearly two months at a training camp for The Base. He then rented the apartment in Delaware until his arrest.
This story contains information from The Associated Press.