Oct 16 (Reuters) – Federal prosecutors in Texas have for the first time filed terrorism charges targeting antifa, FBI Director Kash Patel said on Thursday, citing President Donald Trump’s recent designation of the far-left anarchist movement as a terrorist organization, opens new tab.

Cameron Arnold of Dallas and Zachary Evetts of Waxahachie, Texas, were charged on Wednesday with providing support to terrorists for their alleged role in the non-fatal shooting of a police officer at an immigration detention facility. Both were arrested in July with eight others and charged with attempted murder and weapons offenses.

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None of the defendants has entered a plea in the case, court records show, but Arnold and Evetts are set to do so at an October 22 court hearing.

Arnold’s lawyer Cody Cofer said in an email he looks forward to defending his client at trial.

Evetts’ lawyer Patrick McLain said his client is innocent and accused prosecutors of adding the terrorism charges for political reasons.

“I have seen no evidence from the prosecutors to support any of the charges,” McLain told Reuters.

In a post on social media, Patel wrote: “First time ever: the FBI arrested Antifa-aligned anarchist violent extremists and terrorism charges have been brought for the July 4 Prairieland ICE attack in Texas,” Patel said on social media.

Arnold and Evetts were charged with supporting terrorists generally, not the legally distinct charge of supporting a terrorist organization.

Trump and his Republican allies have accused antifa followers of fomenting political violence following the September assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk and amid protests against federal immigration authorities in cities including Los Angeles, Chicago and Portland, Oregon.

Trump signed an executive order in September calling antifa a terrorist organization, although some national security law experts said the designation was legally questionable because antifa, short for anti-fascist, has no official leadership or organizational structure.

In an indictment filed in Texas federal court on Wednesday, prosecutors allege that Arnold and Evetts were part of an antifa “cell” that carried out a July 4 attack on a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility in Alvarado, Texas.

There had been no mention of antifa in the original charging documents or accompanying announcement by prosecutors.

Prosecutors said the alleged attackers at the Prairieland Detention Facility shot fireworks and vandalized cars before an unnamed co-conspirator allegedly opened fire on officers defending the site, striking a local police officer in the neck.

Reporting by Jack Queen; Editing by Edmund Klamann

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Jack Queen covers major lawsuits against the Trump administration involving urgent questions of executive power and how their resolution could affect the law and the legal profession in the years to come. Previously, he covered criminal and civil cases against Trump during the interim of his presidential terms, including gavel-to-gavel coverage of his historic hush money trial in New York and his civil fraud trial, which ended in a half-billion-dollar judgment. Jack has also covered high-profile defamation cases including the Dominion Voting Systems’ lawsuit against Fox News, which settled for $787 million after intense pretrial litigation. Based in New York, he specializes in breaking news as well as analysis, explainers and other explanatory reporting.