From complaints to indictment: DOJ charges 8 men in UFC Freedom 250 plot
July 9, 2026: DOJ says a grand jury returned a two-count indictment charging eight men in an alleged UFC Freedom 250 White House plot plan.
On July 9, 2026, the Department of Justice announced that a federal grand jury returned a two-count indictment charging eight men in an alleged plot tied to UFC Freedom 250 held on the White House grounds on June 14, 2026.
DOJ says the indictment is a procedural escalation from earlier criminal complaints filed in different districts. It also lays out the governmentโs theory of liability in two separate conspiraciesโwhat prosecutors say defendants planned, and how the alleged conduct connected to federal territory and federal officials.
What a DOJ indictment changes (and what it doesnโt)
DOJ emphasizes that an indictment โmerely contains allegations.โ In other words, it is not a finding of guiltโdefendants are presumed innocent unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Practically, moving from complaints to an indictment means the case is now set up for federal felony litigation: formal charges proceed in court, and the schedule can shift toward arraignments/pleas, discovery, and motion practice.
The alleged plotโand the event itโs tied to
According to the DOJ announcement, defendants conspired to provide support and resources to terrorists starting in May 2026, and the communications and planning allegedly included an attack on UFC Freedom 250 at the White House.
DOJ says the indictment replaces earlier charges brought via criminal complaints in various districts across the country.
Count-by-count: DOJโs two conspiracies
DOJ says the indictment charges two conspiracies:
1) Conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists. DOJ alleges defendants conspired to provide money, firearms, ammunition, body armor, explosives, drones, medical equipment, communication equipment, personnel, and other services.
2) Conspiracy to commit murder on federal government territoryโand to murder a federal government official. DOJ alleges a plan that would target โhigh valueโ figures at UFC Freedom 250, including the President and Vice President of the United States, other federal officials, the Prime Minister of Israel, Elon Musk, and other high value targets.
How the indictment relates to earlier complaint allegations (from the affidavit)
The DOJ announcement ties the indictment to earlier criminal complaints. The attached โRoa and Thomasโ complaint document provides an example of the type of allegations prosecutors rely on when moving a case toward formal felony counts.
For example, the affidavit describes a statement from PROPER to law enforcement in which PROPER allegedly said the plan involved staging a demonstration on the north side of the White House, flying small drones laden with unspecified explosive devices over the north side of the UFC arena, and then using snipers and additional shooters after the crowd and other high value targets evacuated south. The affidavit also says investigators saw Signal chats that allegedly included detailed planning imagery and maps, including potential sniper locations and potential drone launch locations.
The affidavit also describes an interview with THOMAS during the execution of search warrants. It says THOMAS allegedly told investigators he saw himself as the โplanner and advisorโ and that screenshots on his phone allegedly showed Google Maps sections of the Washington, D.C., area including areas surrounding the White House.
Again, these are allegations contained in charging and sworn court filings โ not proof.
What AP reported after the July 16 court appearance
On July 16, 2026, AP reported that two of the eight defendantsโTycen Proper and Chandler Scaggsโentered not guilty pleas before a federal judge in Ohio as part of a consolidated case. AP also reported that the judge scheduled the trial to begin Sept. 14.
AP further said it remained unclear from the court record how close the would-be attackers were to carrying out the alleged plan.
What to watch next in federal court
- More pleas and appearances. Expect further court steps for the remaining defendants as the consolidated case moves forward.
- Discovery and motion practice. Prosecutors and defense teams typically litigate over evidence, timing, and other pretrial issues that can affect how quickly the case proceeds.
- Whether the timetable holds. Watch for court orders addressing scheduling leading up to the Sept. 14 trial start, or any developments that could shift it.
Because the indictment is framed around federal territory and federal officials, itโs also worth watching how federal prosecutors and defense attorneys handle the legal elements of the two conspiracies as the case enters the pretrial phase.
Sources
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