Cobb relocated to western
North Dakota for its supply of high-paying jobs at
oil fields and its high proportion of white residents. He claimed that he was fired from a job over disagreements with a co-worker, and that he lost a job with a
Fargo paving company after there was media coverage of his settlement plans. While Cobb was working in
Watford City, North Dakota, he found on
Craigslist that there were lots available for sale in
Leith, North Dakota. As of December 2013, Cobb lived in Leith, where he tried to create a white supremacist community. By August 2013, he had purchased 13 plots of land in the town. Several other prominent white supremacists, including
April Gaede and her husband, also own land in Leith. He has transferred ownership of two plots to fellow white supremacists
Alex Linder and
Tom Metzger. Another white supremacist,
Jeff Schoep, visited Leith in late September 2013 in order to support Cobb, and he brought several fellow members of the
National Socialist Movement with him. Several former members of
Anti-Racist Action formed a peaceful, grassroots movement called UnityND and began organizing a demonstration of their own in Leith, that would protest against both Cobb and Schoep. Several hundred people attended the protests against Cobb and his allies, including hundreds of members of the
Standing Rock Indian Reservation. As a reaction to Cobb's planned takeover of Leith, some have even advocated disbanding Leith and dissolving it into
Grant County proper. Cobb stated that he will pursue to file a restraining order against the Standing Rock Indian Reservation.
Legal issues In September 2013, Custer Health Environmental Services in
Mandan, North Dakota, which provides safety and sanitation inspections for five counties, including Grant County, had issued 12 citations that month to 10 individuals, including Cobb. Citing Cobb's failure to install a running water and sewage system in his properties within the 30-day deadline, the health unit announced that it would seek a court order to condemn his properties, unless he cooperated and released a plan detailing future water and sewage installation. Afterwards, Cobb announced that he had no intention of cooperating with the health unit and planned to fight the eviction notice.
Arrest and release on probation In November 2013, Cobb and Kynan Dutton were arrested by two Grant county deputies and held in the Mercer County jail. Dutton was already out on bond for a previous drunk and disorderly conduct charge. Cobb was upset, claiming his property was vandalized by the town's residents; two videos from their subsequent 'patrol' were posted on
YouTube. They were booked on suspicion of terrorizing. Ultimately, the two were charged with six counts of "terrorizing". However, the district attorney dropped the second of seven original counts after one man, acting as a reporter in some capacity, later claimed that he "did not feel threatened". According to the Leith website developer, Cobb and the other man arrested held the guns high and then lowered them, but did not speak and did not point the guns directly at the men. The two men subsequently appeared in court for a bond hearing, and the court decided that both should be held without bail. He refused food while in prison, but said that his refusal was not a hunger strike; rather, he was practising
mahasamādhi and that he believed he would leave his physical body for another "plane of existence" at
Yuletide. He also said he considers himself a martyr. As a result of his hunger strike, Cobb was sent to a
psychiatric hospital for evaluation. Together with his follower Kynan Dutton, the two men were scheduled for a preliminary hearing on seven felony accounts of
terrorism to be held on January 13, 2014. His bail was set at $1 million. In February 2014, he sold his house in Leith and one other plot of land to a man from neighboring
Carson, and in March he deeded his remaining lots back to Leith. Of the lots he originally purchased, three remained owned by Alex Linder, Tom Metzger, and Jeff Schoep. The lot owned by Linder was seized for nonpayment of property taxes, and Jeff Schoep later renounced his racist viewpoints. After a plea agreement, Cobb was released on April 29, 2014, on four years' probation and time served. He was fitted with an ankle monitor and banned from returning to Leith. Cobb expressed interest in purchasing lots in
Regan, North Dakota, and
Crosby, North Dakota, and said he would leave Leith if his charges would be dropped. Leith's Mayor Ryan Schock and Councilman Lee Cook, who was one of Cobb's victims, had expressed concerns for the town's safety because Cobb some of the property was still owned by white supremacists. Cobb himself had earlier announced his "retirement from white nationalism" and has said that he will seek permission to transfer his probation to Missouri where he will look after his mother. ==Subsequent activities==