logo
Killings across three states shine spotlight on cultlike ‘Zizian' group

Killings across three states shine spotlight on cultlike ‘Zizian' group

The Guardian15-02-2025
The killing of US border patrol agent David Maland near the Canadian border in January and five other homicides in Vermont, Pennsylvania and California have been tied to a cultlike group.
Interviews and online postings reveal how young computer scientists described by those who know them as highly intelligent appear to have become increasingly violent.
Maland, 44, was killed in a 20 January shootout following a traffic stop in Coventry, Vermont, a small town about 20 miles (32km) from the Canadian border. Washington state resident Teresa Youngblut, 21, faces two weapons charges in connection with the killing.
She was traveling with German citizen Felix Bauckholt, who is also listed in court documents as Ophelia. Both had connections to a cultlike group known in online communities as 'Zizians' because of their affinity for a blogger who calls herself 'Ziz'. The pair had been under the surveillance of authorities for several days after an employee at a hotel where they were staying reported seeing Youngblut carrying a gun.
Bauckholt died in the Vermont shootout. Authorities have not specified whose bullets hit whom. Youngblut's lawyer said through a spokesperson that they are not commenting. Youngblut pleaded not guilty in federal court on 7 February.
In November 2019, Jack LaSota, 34 and who goes by she/her pronouns; Emma Borhanian, 31; Gwen Danielson; and Alexander Leatham, 29, were arrested at a protest outside a northern California retreat center where a rationalist group was holding an event. The group said they were protesting sexual misconduct inside the group.
In 2022, landlord Curtis Lind went to court to evict Borhanian, LaSota, Leatham and other tenants who had stopped paying rent at a Vallejo, California, property. Two days before the 15 November eviction deadline, prosecutors say Leatham, Borhanian and Suri Dao attacked him.
Lind shot his attackers, killing Borhanian and wounding Leatham. He survived being impaled with a sword but lost an eye. Prosecutors concluded he acted in self-defense and charged Dao and Leatham with violent crimes.
On 17 January, the 82-year-old landlord was stabbed to death. Maximilian Snyder, 22, who applied for a marriage license with Teresa Youngblut in Washington state in November, is charged with murder in that case.
On New Year's Eve 2022, Rita and Richard Zajko were shot and killed in Chester Heights, Pennsylvania.
Police questioned the couple's daughter, Michelle, at her home in Vermont, and a few weeks later, took her into custody at a Pennsylvania hotel. She was not arrested or charged. LaSota was at the hotel, too. He was arrested after refusing to cooperate with officers and charged with obstructing law enforcement and disorderly conduct.
Six months later, LaSota was released on bail but stopped showing up for court. LaSota's attorney, Daniel McGarrigle, said last month his client was 'wholly and unequivocally innocent of the charges filed in this case.'
LaSota, 34, has not responded to multiple Associated Press emails in recent week. She has missed court appearances in two states, and bench warrants have been issued for her arrest.
Associated Press reporters have left numerous phone and email messages with LaSota's family and received no response.
Her whereabouts are unknown, and McGarrigle declined to say whether he's had recent contact with his client.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canada airdrops aid into Gaza, says Israel violating international law
Canada airdrops aid into Gaza, says Israel violating international law

Reuters

time6 hours ago

  • Reuters

Canada airdrops aid into Gaza, says Israel violating international law

Aug 4 (Reuters) - Canada said on Monday it delivered humanitarian assistance through airdrops to Gaza, which has been under a devastating Israeli military assault for almost 22 months, with Ottawa again accusing Israel of violating international law. "The (Canadian Armed Forces) employed a CC-130J Hercules aircraft to conduct an airdrop of critical humanitarian aid in support of Global Affairs Canada into the Gaza Strip. The air drop consisted of 21,600 pounds of aid," the Canadian government said in a statement. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported that it was Canadian Armed Forces' first humanitarian airdrop over Gaza using their own aircraft. The Israeli military said 120 food aid packages for Gaza's residents were airdropped by six countries, including Canada. The other five were Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Germany and Belgium. Canada said last week it plans to recognize the State of Palestine at a meeting of the United Nations in September, ratcheting up pressure on Israel as starvation spreads in Gaza. Canada also said on Monday that Israeli restrictions have posed challenges for humanitarian agencies. "This obstruction of aid is a violation of international humanitarian law and must end immediately," Canada's government said. The Israeli embassy in Ottawa had no immediate comment. Israel denies accusations of violating international law and blames Hamas for the suffering in Gaza. Israel cut off food supplies to Gaza in March and then lifted that blockade in May - but with restrictions that it said were needed to prevent aid from being diverted to militant groups. President Donald Trump also claimed Hamas militants were stealing food coming into Gaza and selling it. However, Reuters reported late last month that an internal U.S. government analysis found no evidence of systematic theft by Hamas of U.S.-funded humanitarian supplies. Israel says it is taking steps for more aid to reach Gaza's population, including pausing fighting for part of the day in some areas, allowing airdrops and announcing protected routes for aid convoys. The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered in October 2023 when Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 and taking about 250 hostages, Israeli tallies show. Gaza's health ministry says Israel's subsequent military assault has killed over 60,000 Palestinians. It has also caused a hunger crisis, internally displaced Gaza's entire population and prompted accusations of genocide at the International Court of Justice and of war crimes at the International Criminal Court. Israel denies the accusations.

This UFO and Bigfoot expert is the latest person to join Reform UK
This UFO and Bigfoot expert is the latest person to join Reform UK

Metro

time13 hours ago

  • Metro

This UFO and Bigfoot expert is the latest person to join Reform UK

A former MEP who has written books on topics as diverse as Bigfoot, Jack the Ripper and the aliens of Area 51 has been announced as the latest recruit to Reform UK. Rupert Matthews is the author of more than 170 books, according to his page on Amazon – though his specialist subjects are history and the paranormal. Among his most popular works are 'Sasquatch: North America's Enduring Mystery', 'Alien Encounters: Extraordinary Tales of Strange Phenomena', and 'Haunted York'. This morning, he was unveiled as the latest defection from the Conservatives to Reform in a press conference hosted by Nigel Farage. As the serving police and crime commissioner for Leicestershire and Rutland, Matthews becomes the first Reform figure to serve in that role. He told the press event he was aiming to remove a 'dark heart of wokeness' from the criminal justice system and accused British politicians of taking inspiration from 'countries like Lebanon and Libya'. Craig Munro breaks down Westminster chaos into easy to follow insight, walking you through what the latest policies mean to you. Sent every Wednesday. Sign up here. Matthews said: 'I daily face a fight against crime. 'I see ordinary, hard-working people burgled, robbed and mugged. Shoplifting is getting out of control. Anti-social behaviour is turning too many of our town centres into an apocalyptic wasteland of lawless Britain.' He has served in his current position since 2021, and had a seat in the European Parliament for the Tories before that. Matthews told the event he had been a member of the Conservatives for 40 years. In 2011, the long-time Eurosceptic suggested the European Commission could technically send military force into the UK against the British government's wishes. In an interview at the Conservative Party Conference, he said: 'Were there to be massive riots in London, or there were to be all sorts of problems, they could go to the German government and say, 'Please send us a Panzer division.' 'If the German government said yes, then the European Commission could send that Panzer division to London and there's nothing the British government could do about it.' A spokesperson for No 10 said: 'Their big defection is very interested in the fantastical and the unexplained. 'It's no surprise who's added Reform's fiscal plans to that list.' Hello, I'm Craig Munro and I'm Metro's man in Westminster. Every Wednesday, I write our Alright, Gov? newsletter with insights from behind the scenes in the Houses of Parliament – and how the decisions made there will end up affecting you. This week we had a look at the impact of the government's big announcement on recognising Palestinian statehood – and answered a question from a reader about how petitions work. Click here to sign up At today's event, Farage also announced Vanessa Frake-Harris – the former prison governor of Wormwood Scrubs – as a member of its law and order taskforce. More Trending She said: 'Our prisons are in a crisis caused by Labour and the Conservatives. What have their solutions been? They have let out 10,000 prisoners out of jail early. 'To let criminals out of jail before they even serve their full sentence is a disgrace.' Both new recruits were announced as part of a weeks-long series of events focusing on crime and justice organised by Reform over parliamentary recess. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Risk and reward, Trump's Mini-Me and planting trees for the planet MORE: Labour's love lost in less than a year but will electoral reform rescue it? MORE: From defending free speech to dictating the media, readers discuss the Online Safety Act

Study confirms women in politics receive more attacks and abuse on social media than men
Study confirms women in politics receive more attacks and abuse on social media than men

Daily Mirror

time20 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Study confirms women in politics receive more attacks and abuse on social media than men

The research, which analysed millions of posts, also found that the language aimed at politicians in the UK contained more abusive words than those in other countries Female politicians in Europe receive more identity-based attacks than other politicians, according to new research. The study analysed 23 million posts on X addressed to politicians in the UK, Spain, Germany and the US, and found that women in Europe experience online "incivility" regardless of how well known they are. ‌ Incivility has been defined as posts which contain hate speech or assign stereotypes, undermine or exclude a social group, or threaten someone's rights. It also includes posts that name-call (such as 'weirdo' or 'idiot'), cast aspersions ('liar' or 'traitor'), use pejorative speak, sarcasm, and all-caps. It comes after Nigel Farage unveiled an ex-Tory who made racist remark on WhatsApp as its newest defector. ‌ This incivility faced by female politicians can include everything from misogynistic and sexist comments to violent threats, or attempts to defame or humiliate. ‌ Lead researcher of the study, Maarja Lühiste, associate professor of politics at Newcastle University, said: "We noticed that female candidates targeted with abusive language typically receive more morality-focused words, such as 'vile,' 'shame,' 'shameful,' 'disgraceful,' 'hypocrite,' and 'deluded.'' Lühiste added: "They also receive messages with more references to personal attacks—including words like 'kill,' 'destroy,' and 'rape'—rather than simple swear words." ‌ The study, published in Politics & Gender by Cambridge University Press, found that the posts aimed at Spanish and German politicians appeared to use fewer deliberately abusive words than those aimed at US and UK politicians. Lühiste explained: 'Both men and women politicians experience incivility and, overall, the more famous they are, the more abuse they receive. BUT women in Europe receive uncivil tweets even when they're not well known.' For more stories like this subscribe to our weekly newsletter, The Weekly Gulp, for a curated roundup of trending stories, poignant interviews, and viral lifestyle picks from The Mirror's Audience U35 team delivered straight to your inbox. ‌ She added: 'Political culture and electoral rules may matter, too: German and Spanish politicians in our sample receive less incivility than their UK and US counterparts. And the incivility in less personalised systems - especially in Germany - is relatively 'polite' compared to the other countries in our sample.' Multiple female politicians in the UK have opened up about experiencing online abuse. In 2019, Heidi Allen said she would be stepping down as MP after experiencing 'utterly dehumanising' abuse. ‌ Nicky Morgan also announced that she would no longer be serving as an MP that same year, saying: "I think the role of being an MP has changed. I think the abuse, because of the platforms, because of how strongly people feel about the current political situation, that has changed enormously in the almost 10 years since I started." Angela Rayner has previously spoken up about facing such abuse that she barely read online posts. In 2023, she said she believed female politicians experienced more abuse, explaining: "Whether it's a Conservative MP, SNP or Labour it doesn't matter, it's mainly women that get the abuse. They want to silence us.' Rayner added: "The one thing I'm asked every time I visit a school is 'how do you deal with the abuse you get?' and that shouldn't be the first question young people ask me." Help us improve our content by completing the survey below. We'd love to hear from you!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store