Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Fox News Van Bomber Was a Left-Wing Anarchist

'There’s got to be a revolution somewhere...'

(Headline USAThe Utah man charged with planting a bomb under a Fox News van two days after the Charlie Kirk assassination is a left-wing anarchist, according to records unearthed by CourtWatch.

On Sept. 12, Christopher Solomon Proctor, 45, allegedly lit a fuse attached to a 2.5-gallon plastic gas container that he had put under a news vehicle owned by the Salt Lake City local Fox affiliate, KSTU-TV, that was parked outside of a building. The fuse went out before the gas ignited.

According a the newly unearthed search warrant in the case, Proctor told his family in the weeks leading up to the attack that “I just want to burn it all down.”

“If there were riots nationwide starting today, I’d join. I’m an anarchist to the bone,” Proctor allegedly texted a family member in August.

Proctor also plays bass for a band called The Modifiers. Records show that FBI agents listened to a podcast featuring Proctor, who allegedly said his band is “very political, we’re woke, we’re woke as fuck.”

“There’s got to be a revolution somewhere,” he later said.

Additionally, the search warrant says that Proctor was communicating with at least one other person about his plot.

“If you really wanna do this with me, I am 1000% serious and planning in doing recon stuff, and I definitely need help if you’re willing,” he texted someone on Sept. 10, the day Kirk was assassinated.

No one else has been charged over the failed bombing. Proctor has pleaded not guilty to charges of attempted arson and possession of an unregistered destructive device.

During a hearing earlier this month, U.S. Magistrate Judge Dustin Pead ordered Proctor, who was arrested Sept. 29, to remain in jail until his trial. Pead said there was evidence that Proctor had planned to repeat the attempt, despite family and friends insisting that Proctor posed no danger to others, according to court documents.

A license plate reader recorded Proctor’s vehicle near the scene within minutes of the crime, and investigators found items in Proctor’s home similar to those used to carry out the attempted arson, including black boots, a different gas can that also had a hole carved in the top, and a portion of fuse, Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Thorpe wrote.

According to prosecutors, Proctor bought more fuse days after the failed attempt and returned to the crime scene a week later. Ironically, the left-wing anarchist was driving a Porsche.

Proctor “had mentioned burning Fox News on previous occasions” to others, and told an acquaintance that he lit a fuse under a “fox news” vehicle but it did not blow up, Thorpe wrote.

“That purchase, the presence of another gas-can at his residence and the deliberate resurveilling of the news station lead to an inference that the defendant may not have been satisfied with his failed attempt,” Thorpe wrote.

The day after the alleged arson attempt, two men—Adeeb Nasir, 58, and his 31-year-old son, Adil Nasir—were arrested on suspicion of placing a makeshift bomb under the KSTU-TV news vehicle. Investigators searched their home and found two sticks of inactive dynamite that the men claimed were real, according to court documents. They were charged in state court with crimes including possessing hoax explosives.

However, the men were cleared of their involvement in the bombing last Wednesday, according to the local Fox affiliate that’s also the victim of the crime. The Nasirs were both released from jail, though they still face charges—Abil reportedly facing two felony counts of manufacturing, possessing, selling, or using a weapon of mass destruction, and Abeed facing  two lesser felony counts of possession of a dangerous weapon by a restricted person due to controlled substance use.

“I don’t believe the crime that is spoken about with the FOX 13 stuff, I don’t think that really has anything to do with this case,” Third District Judge Mark Kouris reportedly said after hearing from both the defense and the prosecution, “and the fact that the two were mixed together is a mystery in my opinion.”

The incident happened two days after conservative activist Charlie Kirk was killed during an event at Utah Valley University in Orem, about 35 miles south of Salt Lake City. Thorpe said at Monday’s hearing that there is no evidence linking the alleged arson attempt to Kirk’s death, KSTU-TV reported.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

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