The American newspaper "Washington Post" revealed that there is a great mystery that has become the subject of controversy in Oklahoma, America, related to finding buried human bodies and remains, with which organizations that believe in white supremacy are believed to be related.

The newspaper said that the authorities admitted since last April that they had found charred piles and human bones in different areas of Logan County;

This prompted her to open what has been described as one of the most terrifying and sensitive criminal investigations in Oklahoma's recent history.

The Washington Post quoted officials - who did not reveal their names - as saying that the authorities confirmed that they had found what was believed to be a dumping site for cutting and burning corpses inside a fortified compound, and it was believed that this compound was linked to an organization that believes in the superiority of the white race (Aryan).


The security services are investigating the existence of a link between the criminal elements that believe in white supremacy in prisons and the various crimes that have been uncovered.

The newspaper pointed out that although several months have passed since the discovery of the remains of the victims, the cases are still ambiguous, as the exact number of victims has not been determined, and the authorities have also been keen to maintain the confidentiality of the investigation, and advised the families of the missing to remain silent, in addition to the authorities concealing the details of the ongoing investigation. .

Investigators fear for the safety of the families of the missing persons that they will suffer reprisals through networks of perpetrators who are subject to the directives of the leaders of criminal organizations from inside American prisons.


The authorities admitted that gangs carried out criminal operations inside and outside prisons, and said that Oklahoma alone includes at least 5 large gangs operating inside prisons.

The Washington Post quoted the security services as citing one of the most dangerous criminal elements associated with the white supremacist organization, Michael "Bulldog" Smith, 57, who has been serving a life sentence since 1985 after killing a math teacher in an armed robbery.

Prison officials had to build a special cell for Smith in 1989 after he tried to kill a guard with a sharp blade.

In 2014, his cellmate was killed by suffocation by a prison sheet.