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Investigation with Florida ties focuses on separatist group Black Hammer

A federal indictment in Tampa alleges the group is involved in an effort by a Russian citizen to sow discord in the United States by paying fringe groups to make political protests.
Xavier Rushin, a member of the Black Hammer Party, listens in Fayette County Magistrate Court on Tuesday, Aug. 16, 2022. He and another member of the group are charged with multiple felonies stemming from an alleged kidnapping and sexual assault at the group's communal home in Fayetteville. Rushin is known within the group as Keno.
Xavier Rushin, a member of the Black Hammer Party, listens in Fayette County Magistrate Court on Tuesday, Aug. 16, 2022. He and another member of the group are charged with multiple felonies stemming from an alleged kidnapping and sexual assault at the group's communal home in Fayetteville. Rushin is known within the group as Keno. [ CHRIS JOYNER | Atlanta Journal-Constitution ]
Published Aug. 17, 2022

A Georgia-based Black separatist group is being investigated by federal and local authorities for a range of possible criminal offenses including drug and gun offenses, kidnapping and human trafficking, a detective testified Tuesday in a court hearing in suburban Atlanta.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports Fayetteville Police investigator Diana Snider testified in magistrate court that she began investigating the Black Hammer Party after the group moved its headquarters to the town south of Atlanta. She said she was contacted by the FBI, which she said is also investigating.

Two members of the group have been charged with felonies relating to an alleged kidnapping and sexual assault in July at the house the group rents in Fayetteville.

A spokesperson for the FBI’s Atlanta office declined to comment citing the agency’s policy not to comment on ongoing investigations.

A federal indictment unsealed last month in Tampa alleges the group is involved in an effort by a Russian citizen with Kremlin connections to sow discord in the United States by paying fringe groups to make political protests. The indictment includes groups in Florida and California, as well as the Black Hammer Party, as unindicted co-conspirators to the plot.

A search warrant believed to be connected to the indictment was served at the Uhuru House in St. Petersburg on July 29. Though the indictment did not name the Uhurus, descriptions of the Florida group and its top leaders as unindicted co-conspirators matched the organization. The indictment alleged that the Russian citizen used the group to sow division, spread pro-Russian propaganda and interfere in St. Petersburg city council elections.

Related: What happens next in St. Petersburg case with links to Russian conspiracy?
Related: Uhurus ramped up their tactics in 2017. Was it related to July FBI raid?
Related: For some in St. Petersburg’s Black communities, Uhuru raid ‘doesn’t smell good’

Snider said federal agents have been watching the Black Hammer Party’s attempts to recruit and arm homeless men as a security force and to aggressively solicit college students for donations at a downtown Atlanta park.

No criminal charges have been brought regarding those activities, the newspaper reported that Snider testified. Tuesday’s hearing relates to a July 19 call to police from a person who claimed he was kidnapped and held at gunpoint in a locked garage at the Fayetteville house.

Black Hammer leader Augustus Claudius Romain Jr., 36, known as Gazi Kodzo, and a top lieutenant, 21-year-old Xavier “Keno” Rushin, were charged with kidnapping, aggravated assault, false imprisonment, conspiracy to commit a felony, and taking part in street gang activity.

Romain was also charged with forcible sodomy. Snider testified that Romain required group members to have sex with him to advance within the Black Hammer Party.

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Prosecutors dropped conspiracy charges Tuesday. Magistrate Judge Christy Dunkelberger ruled there was enough evidence to advance the other charges to trial. Romain and Rushin remain jailed without bail.

Defense attorneys for Romain and Rushin on Tuesday questioned the information underlying the arrests and asked how a political party qualifies as a street gang. The group claims it’s being targeted by federal authorities for political activities.

The alleged victim of the sexual assault declined to speak to police at the time of the arrests and the alleged kidnapping victim who called police is homeless.

“This entire case appears to arise on the statement of one person,” said Stacey Flynn, the lawyer for Romain, referring to the man who called the police.

Fayetteville detective Justin Taylor said the man told police he and another Black Hammer recruit had been forced into a locked garage and held at gunpoint when the victim refused Romain’s order that everyone go to bed at 8 p.m. because the group had a protest the next morning. Taylor testified Romain and another Black Hammer member, 18-year-old Amonte “AP” Adams, held guns.

Adams was found inside the house when police raided, dead from what police said appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The Black Hammer Party has, without evidence, accused police of shooting Adams. Taylor said an autopsy of the man has been completed, but a report is not yet available.

Snider said police and the FBI are investigating three other kidnappings that are alleged to have occurred in the house.