Extremist Content Online: Pro-ISIS Channel Releases New Monero Wallet Address Following Arrest of Alleged Propagandist

(New York, N.Y.) — The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) reports weekly on the methods used by extremists and terrorist groups on the Internet to spread propaganda and incite violence. Last week, CEP researchers found a new Monero wallet shared by an ISIS-K-linked propaganda group after an alleged prominent operative connected to the group was arrested. 

CEP researchers also located a fundraiser on the GiveSendGo platform, which was shared by several antisemitic Telegram channels, for an Ohio man who is facing large fines for littering after being accused of 160 traffic violations after allegedly distributing antisemitic, racist, anti-immigrant, and anti-LGBTQ flyers in a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, neighborhood. Also, on Telegram, several extreme right channels and users criticized two individuals arrested in Washington state who allegedly stole military equipment and gathered a large quantity of firearms and neo-Nazi paraphernalia.

 

Pro-ISIS Channel Releases New Monero Wallet Address Following Arrest of Alleged Propagandist

On June 2, a pro-ISIS channel on the RocketChat platform released a new wallet address for sending the privacy cryptocurrency Monero. The channel, affiliated with ISIS-K-linked Al-Azaim in Turkish, urged the group’s online supporters to send money to “help their Mujahideen brothers, both in the media and in the field.” 

On Sunday, June 1, the Turkish government announced that an alleged senior ISIS operative involved with propaganda and logistics, Ozgur Altun, was arrested after crossing into Pakistan from Afghanistan. Pro-ISIS channels on RocketChat had noted several times in May that a prominent propagandist had not posted on the platform and was unreachable. The English-language Al-Azaim channel has not posted since April 28, 2025. The last issue of the English-language ISIS-K linked web magazine, “Voice of Khorasan,” was released on March 27. 

On May 28, a pro-ISIS cybersecurity group, noting the propagandist’s arrest, claimed that cryptocurrency wallets associated with the individual had been compromised. “Voice of Khorasan” magazine first requested donations in Monero cryptocurrency in issue 29, released on October 2, 2023. An infographic in issue 45, released on March 27, noted that one unit of Monero (approximately $222 at the time of the magazine’s release) could be used to purchase ammunition or firearms, support a fighter’s family for an entire month, or buy clothing for children. Monero operates on a privacy blockchain, making transactions untraceable.

pro-isis monero wallet number

 

Antisemitic Telegram Channels Share GiveSendGo Fundraiser

On June 4 and 5, antisemitic Telegram channels affiliated with the Goyim Defense League (GDL) and their allies shared a fundraiser on GiveSendGo for Jeremy Brokaw of Zanesville, Ohio. Brokaw is facing $48,000 in fines for over 160 traffic violations for littering after being identified by police as having thrown antisemitic, racist, anti-immigrant, and anti-LGBTQ GDL flyers from his vehicle in the Squirrel Hill section of Pittsburgh. On October 27, 2018, 11 people were murdered, and six were injured at a synagogue in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood by a heavily armed right-wing extremist.

Telegram posts made by antisemitic accounts that shared the GiveSendGo fundraiser called Brokaw a “verified member of our community.” Posts encouraged donating to help pay for his fines and legal fees as a way to fight “the antiwhite system.” As of June 9, the GiveSendGo fundraiser had received $2,805 out of a total request of $50,000. Two individuals donated large sums of over $400 to the fundraiser, including one individual who donated $1,000 and posted an antisemitic message on the GiveSendGo fundraiser and another who donated $500 and posted two acronyms used to promote violence against Jews and Black people.

 

Online Extreme Right Reacts to Arrest of Two Individuals in Washington State with Arsenal and Neo-Nazi Paraphernalia 

On June 4 and 5, several Telegram channels and users reacted to the June 2 arrest of Levi Austin Frakes and Charles Ethan Fields by law enforcement after the two individuals were arrested in an FBI raid after allegedly stealing equipment from Joint Base Lewis-McChord. The two individuals, both veterans, were charged with robbery, assault, and theft of government property and had amassed dozens of firearms, explosives, ammunition, and protective equipment. News reports featured photos of a Nazi flag, the flag of the Nazi Schutzstaffel, also known as the SS, and other neo-Nazi items in the residence of Frakes and Fields.

A prominent neo-Nazi Telegram channel that promotes accelerationism denounced the two arrested individuals for making the mistake of allegedly stealing from a military base instead of purchasing equipment. A white supremacist Telegram channel with over 400 subscribers, in multiple posts, condemned the two individuals as having made serious blunders, noting that amassing an arsenal draws the attention of other people, including law enforcement, and that the individuals potentially committed felonies by modifying their firearms, including with 3D-printed components. The same channel noted that neo-Nazi paraphernalia, when combined with illegal activities, would become “trophies for the system to parade around and desecrate.” The channel stated that white supremacists should seek to go unnoticed and not advertise illegality for “cool points.”

Users of a chat associated with a Telegram channel belonging to a white nationalist firearms influencer claimed that the two individuals arrested had not broken any laws or claimed that the FBI raid was a false flag made in an attempt to legitimize law enforcement. A channel associated with the group Aryan Freedom Network also insinuated that the raid was somehow false or exaggerated.