. Over time, different national and regional Three Percenter umbrella organisations have formed and disbanded, often coexisting while remaining largely independent from one another. While hierarchical at a local level, nationally they operate as a decentralized system of networks or cells. Chapters engage in paramilitary activities and attend counter-protests opposing
left wing activism. Members often attend anti-government protests in tactical gear, such as the
armed standoff between Cliven Bundy and the federal government in 2014. Three Percenters have joined vigilante patrols along the
U.S.–Mexico border and have provided security for pro–
Donald Trump and
white-supremacist rallies, including the 2017
Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia; the group later sought to distance itself from the white supremacist movement. The group's members have a record of involvement in criminal activity, and some have been associated with acts of violence as well as violent threats. According to the
International Centre for Counter-Terrorism, individuals associated with the Three Percenters have "used or planned to use firearms and explosives in plots targeting law enforcement officers, private businesses, an abortion clinic, a mosque, and housing complexes inhabited by immigrants". In 2013, Christian Allen Kerodin and associates were working on the construction of a walled compound in
Benewah County, Idaho, "for Three Percenters", designed to house 7,000 people following a major disaster, an initiative which local law enforcement has described as a "scam". In April 2013, a group of
Jersey City, New Jersey, police officers were disciplined for wearing patches reading "One of the 3%". Following the
2015 Chattanooga shootings at a
strip mall, a military recruitment center and a
United States Navy Operational Support Center in
Chattanooga, Tennessee, Three Percenters, Oath Keepers, and other militia groups began organizing armed gatherings outside of recruiting centers in several states, with the stated objective of protecting service members, who were barred from carrying weapons while on duty in civilian recruitment centers. In response, the Army Command Operations Center Security Division issued a letter ordering soldiers not to interact with or acknowledge armed civilians outside of recruitment centers, and that "If questioned by these alleged concerned citizens, be polite, professional and terminate the conversation immediately and report the incident to local law enforcement", noting that the issuing officer is "sure the citizens mean well, but we cannot assume this in every case and we do not want to advocate this behavior". They left several hours later after being told their assistance was not needed. Two days previously, Three Percenters founder Mike Vanderboegh had described the occupiers as "a collection of fruits and nuts". "What
Bundy and this collection of fruits and nuts has done is give the feds the perfect opportunity to advance their agenda to discredit us", he said. Several Three Percenters were also present at the
Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017, along with members of the
Redneck Revolt, a left-leaning militia group. After the events at Charlottesville, the group's "National Council" issued a "stand down order", stating, "we will not align ourselves with any type of racist group". The group issued a statement saying they "strongly reject and denounce anyone who calls themselves a patriot or a Three Percenter that has attended or is planning on attending any type of protest or counter protest related to these
white supremacist and
Nazi groups". In 2017, a 23-year-old
Oklahoma man, Jerry Drake Varnell, was arrested on federal charges of plotting a
vehicle bomb attack on a bank in downtown
Oklahoma City, modeled after the 1995
Oklahoma City bombing. During a meeting in 2017 with undercover
FBI agents, Varnell identified with the Three Percenters movement, saying that he subscribed to "III% ideology" and intended "to start the next revolution." In 2018, three men were arrested in connection with the bombing of the
Dar Al-Farooq Islamic Center in
Bloomington, Minnesota. The bombing was non-lethal. One of the men involved, former sheriff's deputy Michael B. Hari, had connections to the III%s. In June 2019, Oregon governor
Kate Brown sent the
Oregon State Police to bring
11 absent Republican state senators back to the
Oregon State Capitol. The Republican state senators had gone into hiding to prevent a vote on a
cap-and-trade proposal to lower
greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 to
combat climate change. The Three Percenters offered support for the Republican senators, declaring they would be "doing whatever it takes to keep these senators safe". On June 22, 2019, a session of the
Oregon Senate was cancelled when the Oregon State Capitol was closed due to a warning from the state police of a "possible militia threat". In May 2020, during a Second Amendment rally on
Memorial Day weekend in
Frankfort, Kentucky, Three Percenters and other protesters breached several
off-limit barriers to access the front porch of the
Governor's Mansion,
Governor Andy Beshear's primary residence, and began heckling the Mansion's occupants in response to the Governor's
restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Soon afterward, members of the group moved several hundred yards away. They hung an
effigy bearing the Governor's face and a sign reading
sic semper tyrannis ("thus always to tyrants") from a tree. The event drew condemnation from Beshear and from across the political spectrum. Some state officials had joined the Three Percenters at earlier events, including
Kentucky State Representatives Savannah Maddox and
Stan Lee, and
Kentucky State Senator John Schickel. Beshear labeled the group as "radical", that their actions were "aimed at creating fear and terror", and declared that officials who appeared at previous Three Percenter events "cannot fan the flames and then condemn the fire." Three Percenters Barry Croft and Adam Fox took part in a
plot to kidnap Michigan governor
Gretchen Whitmer. Michael Jung, a prominent Three Percenter in Wisconsin, offered a location for members to train, he claims to be the second-in-command of the Wisconsin branch. Colorado congresswoman
Lauren Boebert has close ties to the group. == Participation in the January 6 United States Capitol attack ==