---
category: Extremism & Violent Networks
created: 2026-05-21
location: Texas
summary: John Cameron Denton, known online as 'Rape,' was Atomwaffen Division's propaganda
  chief and the architect of a large-scale swatting campaign targeting journalists
  and civil rights organizations, convicted in federal court and sentenced to 41 months.
tags:
- Person
- AtomwaffenDivision
- NeoNazi
- Swatting
- Propaganda
- FederalCase
- Texas
- USA
updated: 2026-05-21
---

[John Cameron Denton](/people/john-cameron-denton/), known online as "Rape" and under additional aliases including "Torque," was [Atomwaffen Division](/organizations/atomwaffen-division/)'s primary propaganda organizer and the architect of a large-scale swatting campaign that targeted journalists and civil rights organizations who had reported on or tracked AWD's activities. He was arrested by the FBI and convicted in federal court, receiving a 41-month sentence.

### AWD Propaganda Role

Denton served as a key organizer of AWD's propaganda and online operations from his base in Texas. In that role he coordinated the production and distribution of AWD's recruitment materials, maintained the network's online presence across multiple platforms, and helped manage the organization's internal communications infrastructure. His work made AWD's propaganda some of the most recognizable neo-Nazi extremist content circulating on the early-to-mid 2010s internet, with its distinctive skull mask aesthetic and accelerationist messaging.[^1]

### Swatting Campaign

Beginning in late 2018 and continuing into 2019, Denton organized and executed a coordinated swatting campaign targeting individuals and organizations he and other AWD members viewed as enemies. Documented targets included a Virginia university, a former U.S. Cabinet member, a historic Black church outside Washington, D.C., an Islamic Center in Arlington, Texas, and journalists and civil rights organizations that monitored extremist activity. Federal prosecutors described it as "the most widespread swatting conspiracy in the country" known to law enforcement. Swatting - the practice of making false emergency reports to law enforcement to trigger armed police responses at a target's location - constitutes a serious felony and carries the risk of lethal violence against victims; several people in the United States have been killed by police in swatting incidents.

Denton's campaign involved directing other AWD members to make false reports about specific targets, coordinating the timing and choice of victims, and using VoIP services and other tools to disguise the origin of the calls. The campaign represented AWD's use of harassment and intimidation as an organizational tactic alongside its advocacy for direct violence.[^2]

### Arrest and Conviction

The FBI investigated Denton's swatting operation and he was arrested in a raid on his home in Conroe, Texas, on February 26, 2020. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced in the Eastern District of Virginia in May 2021 to 41 months in federal prison, with a hate crime enhancement applied. Denton expressed no remorse at sentencing. The case was among the first federal convictions of an AWD member following [Brandon Russell](/people/brandon-russell/)'s 2018 explosives conviction and was part of the sustained law enforcement campaign that dismantled AWD's leadership between 2018 and 2022.[^2]

[^1]: ProPublica / PBS Frontline. "Armed and Dangerous." 2018. https://www.propublica.org/article/atomwaffen-division-armed-and-dangerous
[^2]: U.S. Department of Justice, OPA. Federal conviction and sentencing records for John Cameron Denton.
