A St. Cloud man who pledged loyalty to the anti-government group Boogaloo Bois pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to illegally possessing two devices that turn semi-automatic rifles into automatic weapons.
Federal agents started investigating Michael Paul Dahlager, 27, in November after a confidential informant reported that Dahlager had discussed "his willingness to kill law enforcement," according to an FBI affidavit in a criminal complaint filed in Minnesota U.S. District Court in April.
In December, after Donald Trump lost the presidential election, Dahlager attended a "Stop the Steal" rally at the State Capitol in St. Paul to record the scene and scout tactical locations and security presence. He told the informant he was planning to attack the State Capitol on Jan. 17, the day a nonviolent group of Trump supporters planned to protest the results of the election, according to the documents.
Coming shortly after the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, hundreds of state troopers — which Dahlager called an "army" — and more than a dozen journalists also gathered in St. Paul in response to reports of planned protests there.
"If it comes down to having a better world for my kids, I'm 100 percent going to die for my country," Dahlager told the informant, the documents say. "The state's standing army that we were warned about is at the Capitol."
Dahlager showed the informant his arsenal, which included tactical body armor, an AR-15 and a device to suppress the sound of a gun. He told the informant that his "house has portholes to make a stand if law enforcement confronts him at [his] home."
Five days before the planned attack, Dahlager abandoned the plan out of fear an informant had infiltrated his inner circle. He and other members of the Boogaloo Bois determined to instead focus on tactical training and recruitment.
On Feb. 3, Dahlager gave the informant gun-modifying devices, called "drop-in auto sears," which he said could last 10,000 rounds, according to court documents. Under federal law, auto sears are treated as machine guns.