California ‘Terrorgram’ Leader Gets 30-Year Sentence For Orchestrating Global Violence

HomeCops and Crime

California ‘Terrorgram’ Leader Gets 30-Year Sentence For Orchestrating Global Violence

FBI Agent, Source: FBI
FBI Agent, Source: FBI

A California woman accused of directing a digital network of white supremacists from her living room was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison today. Dallas Humber, 35, of Elk Grove, learned her fate before U.S. District Judge Dena Coggins, closing the case on what federal prosecutors described as a transnational campaign of terror that left victims dead on multiple continents.

Humber, identified as a leader of the “Terrorgram Collective,” was handed a 360-month sentence for soliciting hate crimes, conspiring to provide material support to terrorists, and soliciting the murder of federal officials.

Prosecutors painted a stark contrast between Humber’s quiet life in Elk Grove and the global chaos she helped engineer. Between July 2022 and September 2024, authorities say she didn’t just consume extremist content—she actively guided it.

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From her home, Humber provided “technical, inspirational, and operational guidance” to followers, encouraging them to attack critical infrastructure and assassinate public officials.

The consequences of that guidance were lethal. According to the Department of Justice, individuals inspired and directed by Humber’s network carried out attacks worldwide. These included a shooting at an LGBT bar in Bratislava, Slovakia, that killed two people; a rampage at two schools in Aracruz, Brazil, leaving four dead; and a stabbing attack outside a mosque in Turkey.

Domestically, the FBI linked the group to thwarted plots to bomb energy facilities in New Jersey and Tennessee, as well as a conspiracy to murder two people in Wisconsin as part of a larger plan to assassinate a federal official.

“From the comfort of her suburban California home, Humber used online platforms to celebrate violence and solicit attacks that took the lives of innocent people and injured others around the world,” said Assistant Attorney General John A. Eisenberg. “Her incarceration makes the world a safer place.”

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Officials say the heavy sentence reflects the reach of modern digital extremism. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon stated that the 30-year term sends an “unmistakable message” to those hiding behind screens.

“If you plot acts of terror or use extremist networks to incite violence, you will be found, prosecuted, and incarcerated for decades,” Dhillon said.

The case was investigated by the FBI’s Sacramento Field Office, which coordinated with a web of domestic and foreign law enforcement agencies to trace the violence back to Humber’s computer.

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