Neo Nazi death cult telling kids to stab people in the street | World | News

(Stock image) Online gangs have been grooming youngsters to commit violent acts (Image: Getty )
Sick-minded gangs of neo-Nazis are targeting British teenagers in their bedrooms and grooming them online to commit horrific crimes in the street. Disturbing evidence has emerged of teenagers carrying out knife attacks while live-streaming the rampages online at the bidding of shadowing figures who they met in cyberspace.
Sadistic cults are growing at an alarming rate online, with one known as No Lives Matter (NLM) reportedly recruiting hundreds of members since it was established in 2020. Dutch investigators also found links between NLM and a Satanic paedophile ring called 764, which is run by evil predators who abuse girls as young as 11.
The horror gangs recruit teenagers to do their bidding by luring them through online games and forums, before grooming and blackmailing the youngsters using encrypted apps such as the Telegram messaging service.
Graeme Biggar, Director General of Britain’s National Crime Agency (NCA) said the threat of online gangs carrying out these disturbing operations was a “deeply concerning” trend. In a major speech last year Mr Biggar said the networks of predominantly teenage boys were “dedicated to inflicting harm” and committing a range of criminality.
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(Stock image) The gangs target teenagers online and coerce them into committing heinous crimes (Image: Getty )
Mr Biggar added: “This is a hugely complex and deeply concerning phenomenon. Young people are being drawn into these sadistic and violent online gangs where they are collaborating at scale to inflict, or incite others to commit, serious harm.
“These groups are not lurking on the dark web, they exist in the same online world and platforms young people use on a daily basis. It is especially concerning to see the impact this is having on young girls who are often groomed into hurting themselves and in some cases, even encouraged to attempt suicide.”
Cyber threats expert Dr Joe Whittaker told The Sun the online gangs all had one thing in common, in that they all “try and recruit young and vulnerable children”.
Disturbingly the paper reported British police are seeing cases linked to the vile 764 group emerging in the UK. Police found documents of a 764 nature belonging to Cameron Finnigan, 19, who was jailed last January for plotting to kill a homeless man.
Sick Finnigan, who was also convicted for encouraging a young Italian woman to livestream herself ending her life, told police in interview he was only worried about if “I got caught”. NCA officers found six Category A child sex abuse images and a video on Finnigan’s computer. A trend all too common with 764 members.
In Sweden a 14-year-old boy livestreamed several horror knife attacks and assaults in the capital Stockholm in 2024. Videos of his senseless rampage were posted to NLM and 764 Telegram channels. In fact it was the posting of the stabbings he carried out, which injured eight people, that helped police track down the teenager.
However, even at 14, the boy was below Sweden’s age of criminal responsibility at the time and so could not be criminally charged. He was instead ordered to pay “substantial damages”, The Sun reports. In Britain, the age of criminal responsibility in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is 10 years old, in Scotland the age a child can be charged with a crime is 12.

(Stock image) Teenagers across the UK and Europe have been targeted by the gangs (Image: Getty )
The rise of these sinister gangs, dubbed “Com networks” by the authorities, is increasingly concerning for police teams dedicated to protecting children online.
Assistant Chief Constable Alastair Simpson, national policing lead for Child Sexual Exploitation and Abuse & Undercover Online, said last year: “The growth of Com networks that incite and encourage children and vulnerable adults towards acts of self-harm, suicide and violence are hugely concerning.”
He then issued a message to the groups, urging them to “remember that there is no space where criminals operate that we cannot go, and investigations into these networks have already begun”.
The chief also highlighted that social media platforms have a role to play in monitoring and regulating themeslves to “root out this abhorrent criminal behaviour and make all online spaces safe for children and adults”.
Parents and carers can find information, advice and resources to use at home with their children at: www.ceopeducation.co.uk/parents
Under 18s concerned about their own sexual behaviour or thoughts can find help and advice at: www.shorespace.org.uk


