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A man linked to an online white supremacist group has been indicted for authoring a hit
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list of federal officials marked as high-value targets, according to the Department of Justice
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24-year-old Noah Lamb of California is charged with eight federal crimes, including three counts of soliciting the murder of federal officials
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Prosecutors accuse Lamb of targeting people viewed as a threat to the white supremacist
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group known as the Teregram Collective, which largely communicates through the Telegram app
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where prosecutors say Lamb shared his list with a group. Court documents obtained by CNN reveal
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Lamb was in charge of finding targets' addresses and other personal information that could be used
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in his hit list to find each person. Among the reported targets were a U.S. lawmaker described
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as an anti-white, anti-gun Jewish senator, and federal judge called an invader from a foreign
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nation as well as a U.S. attorney the group referred to as a racial slur. The targets were
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not publicly revealed by authorities who say the people on the list were targeted because of race
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national origin, sex, and gender identity. Lamb's list included pictures of the targets as well as
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their names, spouses, and addresses. Next to each picture was a rightful and brief reason as to why
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the group had marked the person to be assassinated. Prosecutors say Lamb was arrested Tuesday and
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investigators found white supremacist literature as well as parts to guns. If convicted on all charges, Lamb faces up to 85 years in prison
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For more on this story, download the Straight Hour News app or visit san.com
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For Straight Hour News, I'm Kaylee Carey