Dallas Humber, the leader of transnational terrorist organization the Terrorgram Collective, has pleaded guilty to all of the charges brought against her, the Justice Department announced on Friday.
The charges range from soliciting hate crimes to orchestrating the murders of federal officials and working to support various terrorists with material goods.
Humber, an Elk Grove, California native, admitted that she led the white supremacist terror group from July 2022 until she was arrested in September 2024. The 35-year-old’s hearing is scheduled for December 5, and the district court judge “deferred acceptance of the plea agreement until the sentencing hearing.”
Humber is currently facing between 25 and 30 years in federal prison. Under Humber’s leadership, members of the Terrorgram Collective carried out assassination attempts of government officials, murders, and various other violent acts. “Humber solicited murders and hate crimes based on the race, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, and gender identity of others,” Acting US Attorney for the Eastern District of California Kimberly Sanchez said.
The prosecutors in this case provided a list of some of the attacks inspired by Humber and her collective. Included were plots to bomb energy facilities in New Jersey and Tennessee, the murders of two people in Wisconsin in an effort to reach and kill a federal official, and an assassination attempt of an Australian official.
Terrorgram assisted in multiple international terror attacks
Humber’s reach extended beyond the US as well. She helped facilitate a shooting in an LGBTQ bar in Slovakia, leaving three people dead and one injured. Members of the Terrorgram Collective also shot eleven people at two schools in Aracruz, Brazil, killing four and injuring five people in a stabbing outside of a mosque in Eskişehir, Turkey.
“Her actions posed a direct threat to our citizens and national security, and the National Security Division will hold her, as well as others who commit these illegal acts, accountable for their terrorist aims,” Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg said.
Humber will remain in custody until her sentencing later this year. The FBI Sacramento Field Office investigated this case in collaboration with various other foreign and domestic law enforcement agencies.