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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

FBI watched Ready, alleged killer who was in neo-Nazi movement

Jason “JT” Ready poses with an assault rifle in 2010. (Associated Press)

PHOENIX – The FBI was already conducting a domestic terrorism investigation of an Arizona border vigilante when the man allegedly killed four people and then himself this week, officials said.

James Turgal, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Phoenix office, told the Arizona Republic that his agency’s probe of Jason Todd “JT” Ready had nothing to do with the murder-suicide stemming from a suspected domestic dispute in a Phoenix suburb Wednesday.

Ready was the leader of the U.S. Border Guards, a group of armed civilians that patrols the Arizona desert for illegal immigrants and drug smugglers.

Turgal said the FBI’s investigation dated to when Ready was a member of the neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement and continued into his participation with the border group.

The report published Saturday says the killings have given the FBI access to Ready’s documents and computers. Search warrant affidavits obtained by the Republic show federal agents seized numerous computers and munitions from the Gilbert home where Ready lived and died in an apparent murder-suicide.

The warrants imply weapons seized at the scene were stolen from the U.S. military.

Turgal was careful to distinguish the ongoing federal investigation from the Wednesday shootings in Gilbert that took the lives of Lisa Lynn Mederos, 47, Ready’s girlfriend; Lisa’s daughter Amber Mederos, 23; Amber’s 15-month-old daughter, Lilly; and Amber’s boyfriend Jim Hiott, 24.

“Yes, we did have an ongoing domestic-terrorism investigation into JT Ready,” Turgal said, “but that has nothing to do with the horrible murders committed there.”