In July 2024, U.S. authorities indicted Michail Chkhikvishvili, the alleged new leader of Maniac Murder Cult (MKY), on four counts related to soliciting hate crimes and planning mass violence in New York City. Chkhikvishvili, 21, was arrested in Chișinău, Moldova, and extradited to the United States on May 22, 2025. The following day, he made his first appearance in Federal District Court before Magistrate Judge Peggy Kuo. Operating under the alias “Commander Butcher,” he was accused of coordinating with an undercover law enforcement officer to orchestrate a large-scale attack. Following his arrest, the militant accelerationist group Injekt Division claimed he had previously lived in Tbilisi, Georgia, and had ties to the Georgian military.
MKY, a neo-Nazi accelerationist group, originated in Ukraine before spreading into Russia and Western Europe. Russian authorities have officially designated it a terrorist organization, citing its role in violent attacks and extremist operations. Unlike traditional ideological movements, MKY operates within “The Com”—a loose network that includes groups like 764, No Lives Matter (NLM), and NSO9A—where violence and criminality serve as prerequisites for membership. Extortion, abuse, and terrorism reinforce MKY’s reputation, not in pursuit of revolutionary goals, but for the sake of chaos and notoriety.
The entanglement between violent extremists and law enforcement is exemplified by Joshua Caleb Sutter, a longtime neo-Nazi and occultist. After serving time for attempting to purchase illegal firearms, Sutter became an FBI informant, embedding himself within far-right groups such as Atomwaffen Division (AWD). Even after being exposed, he continued publishing extremist literature—financed by the FBI—which helped spread the Order of Nine Angles (O9A), a neo-fascist ideology tied to violent acts across multiple countries.
More recently, investigations have linked Sutter to an international child abuse network known as “com” or “764,” which operates across encrypted platforms and engages in systemic exploitation. These revelations raise serious concerns about federal informant oversight, the consequences of law enforcement strategies, and the broader impact of enabling violent extremists in pursuit of intelligence operations.
I haven’t even touched on Michael Angelo Aquino—the U.S. Army officer who specialized in psychological warfare, founded the Temple of Set, and was a prominent Satanist. His rumored ties to far-right extremists in Europe and connections to Operation Gladio add another layer to the tangled web of state-backed extremism.
And yet—strange how far-right extremism keeps growing despite the government’s well-documented support for groups like Operation Gladio, the Grey Wolves, COINTELPRO, PATCON, and Azov. Must be a total coincidence!
Sources:
‘Commander Butcher’ Who Led Neo-Nazi Group Faces Charges in Brooklyn
Brotherhood of Blood: Understanding the Origins and Trajectory of the Maniac Murder Cult
Russia’s Supreme Court designates MKU movement as terrorist organization
Russia prevented 30 terrorist attacks by neo-Nazis in 2022 — anti-terrorist committee
He Was an FBI Informant—and Inspired a Generation of Violent Extremists
FBI Bankrolled Publisher of Occult Neo-Nazi Books, Feds Claim
The Franklin Cover-up: Child Abuse, Satanism, and Murder in Nebraska
The Black Magic of Mental Warfare: A Retrospective on Michael Aquino’s “From PSYOP To MindWar”
Secret Warfare: Operation Gladio and NATO’s Stay-Behind Armies
Operation Gladio: The CIA’s Secret Army in Europe