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Monday 30 March 2026 16:03

Teenager Arrested in Italy for Planning A School Massacre Inspired by Columbine

Operation Hate: Italy's Carabinieri Arrest 17-Year-Old Who Was Planning a Neo-Nazi School AttackItalian military police arrested a 17-year-old on Monday morning on terrorism charges after investigations revealed he had been planning a school massacre modelled on the 1999 Columbine High School shooting. The operation, codenamed "Hate," was conducted by the ROS, the Special Operations Group of the Carabinieri, and involved simultaneous searches across four Italian regions.The teenager, originally from Pescara but resident in a town in the Alto Tevere area of Umbria, faces charges including possession of material with terrorist purposes, as well as incitement to commit crimes on grounds of racial, ethnic and religious discrimination. Investigators found he had been working on the fabrication of weapons and chemical devices, and had been seeking manuals and technical information on the manufacture of explosive devices and firearms. Among the seized material were documents containing technical instructions on dangerous chemical and bacteriological substances, as well as guides to sabotaging essential public services. The case was handled by the juvenile prosecutor's office in L'Aquila, which issued the precautionary custody order. The teenager has been transferred to a juvenile detention facility.  The Online Network Investigators established contacts between the teenager and the leadership of a Telegram group called "Werwolf Division," a virtual environment of neo-Nazi and white supremacist content, where mass killers such as Brenton Tarrant, the perpetrator of the Christchurch mosque attacks in New Zealand in 2019, and Anders Behring Breivik, responsible for the Oslo and Utøya attacks in Norway in 2011, were described as "saints" to be emulated. The teenager had planned the school attack on the Columbine model, to be followed by his own suicide.  Investigators described the broader digital ecosystem as transnational, connecting neo-Nazi, accelerationist and white supremacist groups and channels across multiple countries. The teenager had previously been searched as part of a separate investigation in Brescia into individuals suspected of belonging to far-right online groups with neo-Nazi, supremacist, xenophobic and antisemitic positions.  Seven Others Under Investigation Alongside the arrest, the Carabinieri carried out seven searches against minors in the provinces of Teramo, Perugia, Pescara, Bologna and Arezzo. All seven are under investigation for incitement to commit crimes on grounds of racial, ethnic and religious discrimination. All appear to be embedded in an international virtual ecosystem of neo-Nazi, accelerationist and supremacist groups with a particular attraction to extremist violence.  The searches spanned Abruzzo, Emilia-Romagna, Umbria and Tuscany, pointing to a network of radicalized teenagers operating across a wide geographic area through online platforms, primarily Telegram. The Political Response Italy's Minister of Education Giuseppe Valditara commented on the arrest, saying: "This case is confirmation that we must consider the subject of social media with great attention, probably also by working with the large companies and the various managers of these networks to find solutions together, because it is not just about banning minors." He added that the teenager "was connected to social media and using information, at least from what I have read in early reports, to obtain weapons, explosives and so on. It is a great challenge; unfortunately it is the issue of the moment and it is a very dramatic one."  The Broader Context The arrest comes at a moment when Italy, like most European countries, is grappling with the radicalization of young men through online platforms that operate effectively beyond the reach of national authorities. The "accelerationist" ideology documented in this case, which holds that mass violence is a tool to accelerate the collapse of liberal societies, has been connected to attacks across Europe, North America and Australia in recent years. Tarrant in Christchurch and Breivik in Norway, both glorified in the Werwolf Division Telegram group, have become central figures in this transnational online culture, which actively cultivates the idea of the mass killer as a heroic martyr. What makes the Italian case notable is not only its content but its geography. This is not a story about a teenager in an isolated rural setting with limited social connections. It is a story about a network of radicalized minors scattered across multiple Italian regions, connected through platforms that carry no national borders, celebrating mass violence in the language of racial ideology and actively planning to act on it. The investigation is ongoing.

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Italian military police arrested a 17-year-old on Monday morning on terrorism charges after investigations revealed he had been planning a school massacre modelled on the 1999 Columbine High School shooting. The operation, codenamed "Hate," was conducted by the ROS, the Special Operations Group of the Carabinieri, and involved simultaneous searches across four Italian regions. The teenager, originally from Pescara but resident in a town in the Alto Tevere area of Umbria, faces charges including possession of material with terrorist purposes, as well as incitement to commit crimes on grounds of racial, ethnic and religious discrimination. Investigators found he had been working on the fabrication of weapons and chemical devices, and had been seeking manuals and technical information on the manufacture of explosive devices and firearms. Among the seized material were documents containing technical instructions on dangerous chemical and bacteriological substances, as well as guides to sabotaging essential public services. The case was handled by the juvenile prosecutor's office in L'Aquila, which issued the precautionary custody order. The teenager has been transferred to a juvenile detention facility.  Investigators established contacts between the teenager and the leadership of a Telegram group called "Werwolf Division," a virtual environment of neo-Nazi and white supremacist content, where mass killers such as Brenton Tarrant, the perpetrator of the Christchurch mosque attacks in New Zealand in 2019, and Anders Behring Breivik, responsible for the Oslo and Utøya attacks in Norway in 2011, were described as "saints" to be emulated. The teenager had planned the school attack on the Columbine model, to be followed by his own suicide.  Investigators described the broader digital ecosystem as transnational, connecting neo-Nazi, accelerationist and white supremacist groups and channels across multiple countries. The teenager had previously been searched as part of a separate investigation in Brescia into individuals suspected of belonging to far-right online groups with neo-Nazi, supremacist, xenophobic and antisemitic positions.  Alongside the arrest, the Carabinieri carried out seven searches against minors in the provinces of Teramo, Perugia, Pescara, Bologna and Arezzo. All seven are under investigation for incitement to commit crimes on grounds of racial, ethnic and religious discrimination. All appear to be embedded in an international virtual ecosystem of neo-Nazi, accelerationist and supremacist groups with a particular attraction to extremist violence.  The searches spanned Abruzzo, Emilia-Romagna, Umbria and Tuscany, pointing to a network of radicalized teenagers operating across a wide geographic area through online platforms, primarily Telegram. Italy's Minister of Education Giuseppe Valditara commented on the arrest, saying: "This case is confirmation that we must consider the subject of social media with great attention, probably also by working with the large companies and the various managers of these networks to find solutions together, because it is not just about banning minors." He added that the teenager "was connected to social media and using information, at least from what I have read in early reports, to obtain weapons, explosives and so on. It is a great challenge; unfortunately it is the issue of the moment and it is a very dramatic one."  The arrest comes at a moment when Italy, like most European countries, is grappling with the radicalization of young men through online platforms that operate effectively beyond the reach of national authorities. The "accelerationist" ideology documented in this case, which holds that mass violence is a tool to accelerate the collapse of liberal societies, has been connected to attacks across Europe, North America and Australia in recent years. Tarrant in Christchurch and Breivik in Norway, both glorified in the Werwolf Division Telegram group, have become central figures in this transnational online culture, which actively cultivates the idea of the mass killer as a heroic martyr. What makes the Italian case notable is not only its content but its geography. This is not a story about a teenager in an isolated rural setting with limited social connections. It is a story about a network of radicalized minors scattered across multiple Italian regions, connected through platforms that carry no national borders, celebrating mass violence in the language of racial ideology and actively planning to act on it. The investigation is ongoing.
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