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NC 'Boogaloo Boi' sentenced on terrorism charges in Minneapolis

Michael Solomon, 30, of New Brighton (left) and Benjamin Teeter, 22, of Hampstead, N.C. (right) have been charged by the Justice Department with conspiring and attempting to provide material support to Hamas, a designated foreign terrorist organization.
Courtesy of Sherburne County

A federal judge in Minneapolis on Wednesday sentenced another member of a far-right extremist group to prison on terrorism charges.

Benjamin Ryan Teeter, 24, of Hampstead, got on the FBI's radar after he and Michael Robert Solomon, 32, of New Brighton, Minnesota, showed up with guns at protests in Minneapolis two years ago that followed the police murder of George Floyd.

Teeter and Solomon were part of the Boogaloo Bois, a loose-knit organization that hopes to foment civil war in the U.S.

The men each pleaded guilty to supporting a foreign terrorist organization after trying to sell weapons to an FBI informant posing as a member of Hamas.

U.S. District Judge Michael Davis sentenced Teeter to four years in prison. The sentence is a year more than he gave Solomon in March. But Davis said he'd consider reducing Teeter's sentence to three years if he follows through on his agreement to cooperate with prosecutors.

Noting that the 48-month term is far less than other terrorism defendants he sentenced in recent years, Davis told Teeter that he got "one heck of a break."

In April, Davis sentenced Ivan Harrison Hunter of Boerne, Tex. to 52 months for rioting after Hunter admitted firing 13 rounds from a semiautomatic rifle into the Third Precinct police station as the building burned.

A fourth Boogaloo Bois defendant not charged in connection with the Floyd protests received a two-year sentence in January after pleading guilty to trying to sell machine gun parts to an informant.

The FBI said Michael Paul Dahlager, 28, of St. Cloud, Minnesota, conducted surveillance of law enforcement ahead of a pro-Trump rally at the Minnesota Capitol after the 2020 election and had expressed a willingness to kill police.

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Matt Sepic
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