
A teenager murdered his parents as part of a plan to kill Donald Trump.
A teenager in the state of Wisconsin murdered his two parents as part of a plan to commit an assassination against President Trump
Nikita Casap, a 17-year-old teenager from Waukesha, Wisconsin, has been charged with murdering his mother and stepfather in a premeditated act that, according to court documents, was part of a broader plan to assassinate President Donald Trump and overthrow the United States government.
Casap was arrested in March and faces multiple state and federal charges, including first-degree murder, hiding corpses, conspiracy, attempted assassination, and use of weapons of mass destruction.
Authorities found the bodies ofTatiana Casap, 35 years old, and Donald Mayer, 51, on February 28 during a welfare check requested due to the young man's prolonged absence from Waukesha West High School.
The bodies, in an advanced state of decomposition, were hidden under piles of clothes and blankets inside the home. Tatiana had multiple gunshot wounds to the neck, torso, abdomen, and wrist, while Mayer was found with a gunshot wound to the head in his office.

According to a federal affidavit, the teenager wrote a manifesto titled "Accelerate the Collapse," in which he called for the assassination of President Trump as an initial act to provoke chaos and start a "political revolution" with the aim of "saving the white race" from "Jew-controlled" lawmakers.
The manifesto, found on his phone, included explicit references to the elimination of the president and vice president as a way to destabilize the country.
In addition to the manifesto, images of Adolf Hitler were found accompanied by phrases like "HAIL HITLER HAIL THE WHITE RACE HAIL VICTORY."
The content of Casap's phone also included instructions for making bombs, carrying out terrorist attacks, and messages suggesting contact with an extremist organization known as The Order of Nine Angles, a neo-Nazi network with a white supremacist ideology.

The investigation also revealed that Casap had been in communication with other individuals who were aware of his plan, including the acquisition of drones and explosives with the intention of using them as weapons of mass destruction.
It is suspected that some of these individuals provided material or logistical support to Casap in his preparation to carry out these acts.
During the investigation, a schoolmate told authorities that Casap mentioned being in contact with a man in Russia, who was allegedly aware of the teenager's plan to take his family's passports, steal a car, take the family dog, and flee to Ukraine.

In addition to the murder and terrorism charges, Casap faces accusations of stealing goods valued at more than USD 10,000 and for misuse of identities to obtain money.
He has been denied bail and remains in custody awaiting an arraignment hearing scheduled for May 7. He has not yet entered a formal plea of guilty or not guilty.
The case has caused great concern over the radicalization of young people through extremist ideologies and their possible connection to international networks. Federal authorities continue to investigate the extent of the conspiracy, while the FBI, along with prosecutors from the Eastern District of Wisconsin, prepares possible federal charges.

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