A federal jury has indicted two alleged Antifa militants for terrorism, for their roles in this summer’s ambush on an ICE facility in Alvarado.

Cameron Arnold, who identifies as “Autumn Hill,” and Zachary Evetts were indicted on October 15 for terrorism and attempted murder, following the ambush on the ICE Prairieland Detention Facility.

Antifa-linked militants reportedly assaulted the facility, south of Fort Worth, on July 4 and shot a responding Alvarado police officer in the neck, as The Dallas Express previously reported.

President Donald Trump designated the radical left-wing group a domestic terrorist organization in September. 

Now, both Arnold and Evetts face one count of providing material support to terrorists, three counts of attempted murder of federal and assisting officers, and three counts of firing a gun while committing the crimes, according to Fox News. 

Arnold and Evetts were charged with supporting terrorists for providing “material support and resources,” and working to “conceal and disguise” their nature, in the ICE ambush, according to charging documents obtained by the outlet. They allegedly helped provide “property, services, training, communications equipment, weapons, explosives, personnel (including themselves), and transportation.” 

The suspects faced three counts of attempted murder of federal and assisting officers, for allegedly trying to kill two ICE corrections officers and one responding Alvarado police officer, the documents show. The police officer was shot in the neck, but later recovered.

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Arnold and Evetts also faced three counts for allegedly firing a rifle while trying to murder the corrections officers and the police officer, according to the documents. Federal prison records show they are both currently detained at the Federal Medical Center-Fort Worth.

This marks the first time the FBI has charged Antifa-aligned suspects with material support to terrorism, FBI Director Kash Patel told Fox News in a statement. He called the ambush a “planned and coordinated terrorist attack,” and said the FBI has made more than 20 arrests in the case – up from the initial 11 arrests.

“No one gets to harm law enforcement,” Patel posted on X. “Not on my watch.”

One of the alleged militants, Benjamin Song, fled authorities – sparking a massive FBI manhunt, as The Dallas Express reported at the time. The agency captured him in Dallas on July 15.

Just days after the Antifa ambush on the ICE facility in Alvarado, another suspect fired on Customs and Border Protection in McAllen on July 7 – wounding a federal agent and two officers, as The Dallas Express reported at the time. His car was spray-painted with “Cordis Die,” the slogan of a fictional revolutionary movement in the video game Call of Duty.

Following Tyler Robinson‘s assassination of Charlie Kirk on September 10, another killer, Joshua Jahn, targeted the Dallas ICE facility on September 24 – killing two detainees and wounding another, as The Dallas Express also reported. Federal officials said the shooter was trying to murder ICE agents.

Just days before this, one of the Antifa suspects in the Alvarado ICE ambush – Dario Emmanuel Sanchez – had posted bond, then was re-arrested for hindering prosecution of terrorism, as The Dallas Express reported. 

Attorney General Pam Bondi warned that federal prosecutors will charge Antifa militants with terrorism. 

“Antifa is a left-wing terrorist organization,” Bondi posted on X. “They will be prosecuted as such.”