The 16-year-old girl was charged with attempt to commit murder after students at her high school told administrators she had a notebook filled with “detailed plans” to kill members of the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Gainesville, Ga., according to police.
The alleged plot was “definitely racially motivated,” said Sgt. Kevin Holbrook of the Gainesville Police Department. The notebook, he said, contained “manifesto-type” language that discussed how she wanted to assault black parishioners with butcher knives and other sharp-edged weapons.
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“There were many writings and drawings, different depictions, and a lot of hateful messages in it,” Holbrook told The Washington Post. “As far as the details go, they were down to very specific information.”
Police said the girl researched African American churches online, choosing Bethel AME Church because it is small. Investigators believe she went to the church at some point earlier this month, possibly to carry out the attack, but found the building empty, according to police.
“By pure grace, the church did not have service that evening,” Holbrook said. “We were very fortunate here.”
The teenager is being held in the Regional Youth Detention Center in Gainesville. Police did not release her name Tuesday.
The girl’s arrest comes as black churches and other houses of worship around the country have faced a wave of violence and intimidation.
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Earlier this year, three historically black churches in St. Landy Parish, La., were torched in the span of 10 days in what authorities have said were racially motivated attacks. The suspect, a local sheriff’s deputy’s son, has pleaded not guilty to arson and hate crime charges.
Extremist attackers have targeted Jewish institutions in increasing numbers, according to anti-hate groups. Last October, a gunman allegedly left a trail of anti-Semitic posts on social media before fatally shooting 11 congregants at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue, in the deadliest attack on Jews in U.S. history. And just last month, authorities arrested a self-proclaimed white supremacist who allegedly planned to blow up a historic Colorado synagogue as part of a “racial holy war.”
Georgia is one of four states that do not have official hate crime laws on their books, making it unclear how the alleged racist nature of the plot against the Gainesville church will factor in the case against the teenager.
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