Teenage neo-Nazi who wanted to kill Asian friend found guilty of terror plot in UK

A view of the UK's Central Criminal Court, also referred to as the Old Bailey. File Picture: Nick Ansell/PA
A teenage neo-Nazi who wanted to shoot an Asian friend over boasts he slept with âwhite chicksâ has been found guilty of plotting terrorist acts in the UK.
Matthew Cronjager, 18, tried to get hold of a 3D printed gun or a sawn-off shotgun to kill his teenage target who he likened to a âcockroachâ, the Old Bailey was told.
He set up an online library to share right-wing propaganda and explosives-making manuals with like-minded people he had met on the web.
He also set himself up as the âbossâ of a right-wing terror cell, the court was told.
But Cronjager, of Ingatestone in Essex, was sharing his plans with an undercover police officer who had infiltrated a Telegram group called The British Hand.
Cronjager, who is on the autistic spectrum, denied he ever meant to do anything and ârenouncedâ his extremist views, saying they were borne out of loneliness and misery.
His lawyer Tim Forte told jurors that Cronjager fell down the ârabbit holeâ of the internet in his bedroom and found a âbuffet or loathingâ based on misinformation and hatred.
While Cronjager accepted sending âvileâ messages, in reality he was nothing more than a âkeyboard warriorâ, it was claimed on his behalf.
Cronjager created for himself a âsuperhero fantasyâ like a Call Of Duty avatar, but it was all âmake believeâ, Mr Forte asserted.
A jury deliberated for three and a half hours to find him guilty of preparing for acts of terrorism and disseminating terrorist publications on Telegram.
The jury had been told Cronjager admitted four charges of possessing terror documents on the first day of his trial.
The defendant who made no reaction as the verdicts were delivered was remanded into custody to be sentenced on October 18.
The court had previously heard how the defendant wanted a ârevolutionâ based on his fascist beliefs, including hatred of non-white people, Jews, Muslims and those with a different sexual orientation to his.
He had offered to lead the UK division of an extreme right-wing group calling itself Exiled 393, telling members that his time as an army cadet had given him the necessary skills.
In November last year, Cronjager suggested setting up a collective PayPal account to buy weapons and other items for the group.
âI was thinking more of having it to buy things like big tents or a 3D printer maybe for creating bits of âartââ, said to be code for guns," he wrote in one message.
Another member of the group said âa shipmentâ of art would be arriving next year, saying: âWhilst printed art is good, art that is actually painted by professionals is always better.â
Cronjager responded: âI donât want to start anything too soon.â

The court was told that he said he wanted to arm the group but give them a few months before launching an attack to âget over the stress of being illegal and being unable to go back from that pointâ.
In further messages to the undercover officer on December 13, he and Cronjager discussed arranging a drop off location for 3D printed guns, the court heard, and of the supplier needing more money to pay for materials.
Cronjager replied: âOnce weâve got them weâre illegal.
âThereâs no real going back.â
He continued: âWe either go full send it or we pussy out and end up like every other British nationalist group believing we are going to fix this legally.â
On the same day, Cronjager formulated his plot to kill his former friend after he boasted to him of sleeping with three white women.
The defendant told the undercover officer: âIâve found someone I want to execute.â
âI know itâs an overall target and heâs a sand n***** that f***** a white girl.
âIn fact I think three of them.
âI figure we could just âfindâ a double barrel shotgun and saw it down for things like this.
âTwo blasts will kill all but the strongest man and (thereâs) no rifling.
âSo no tracking ballistics.â
Cronjager then added: âTheyâre like cockroachesâ, the court heard.
The defendant continued: âDo you know whatâs weird?
âI was friends with him for ages and I can just kill him like that.
âI have no hang ups about doing it.
âHe crossed the line.â
When asked if his former friend had raped the girls, he allegedly replied: âNope, but itâs a violation of nature.
âWeâre not supposed to mix race ⊠itâs not rape by legal definition but itâs kind of like rape if that makes sense.
âViolation at least.â
On his arrest at his Essex home on December 29 last year, police seized a large amount of material demonstrating his commitment to an âextreme right-wing causeâ, jurors heard.
He attempted to explain his behaviour by claiming to police he was a member of anti-fascist organisation Antifa, that had infiltrated various right-wing groups to disrupt and undermine them.
But giving evidence, he accepted he had held extreme far-right views, saying he now felt âashamed and disgustedâ by them.
The defendant, whose hobbies included computer gaming, karate, football and cricket, described his teenage years as lonely, isolated, quite depressed and anxious, with his negative feelings starting around the age of 16.
His lawyer told jurors that Cronjager was âcuriousâ about guns and weapons and his âfixationâ became the âobsession of a lonerâ, a miserable, isolated young boy in his bedroom.
Mr Forte said: âHe was the outsider, he was the other.
âHe retreated in his own mind and that took him down the rabbit hole that is the internet.
âChildren like him 30/40 years ago unhappy, alone, unwelcome, did not have the internet to lure them and ensnare them with misinformation and hatred but today it is all there laid out on a platter like a buffet of loathing.â
He turned to hate in a âspiral of despairâ but not âhorrendous actsâ, the lawyer said.
But prosecutor Alistair Richardson told jurors: âWhat you have here, in the defendantâs interview and you may have felt during his evidence, was pretty close to a full admission of the offences, faced with the overwhelming evidence of his own messaging, his own words.
âHe accepts setting up the library.
âHe accepts that at the time he had neo-Nazi, fascist, far-right views.
âHe accepts he was angry and that made him feel violent.
âHe accepts that at times he wanted to hurt people.
âHe accepts that the guns were to be used for violence.
âFor violent change.
âIn reality, for terrorist attacks.â
The jury was told that the defendant was on the autism disorder spectrum, with a mild level of severity, and had a high IQ.