Thomas Sewell charged over alleged assault on Channel Nine security guard

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The leader of a Melbourne neo-Nazi group has been charged after allegedly assaulting a Channel Nine security guard prior to the broadcast of a story about his organisation on A Current Affair.

Detectives from Victoria Police’s counter terrorism command last night charged Thomas Sewell, 27, with affray, recklessly causing injury and unlawful assault after he and another man arrived at Nine’s offices and demanded to see A Current Affair staff on March 1.

The pair were escorted out by a security guard, who was then allegedly attacked and punched multiple times by Mr Sewell. His accomplice, a 21-year-old Rowville man who was filming the incident, was also arrested but released by police pending further enquiries.

The former Australian Defence Force member who is one of the leaders of the far-right National Socialist Network escaped with the man on Monday evening before police tracked him down on Tuesday night.

Mr Sewell, also of Rowville, has been bailed to appear at Melbourne Magistrates Court on July 27.

CCTV footage of the incident has been handed to Victoria Police. The Channel Nine security guard was taken to hospital by ambulance.

The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald reported in January that over the Australia Day weekend 38 members of Mr Sewell’s organisation burnt a cross – a ritual usually associated with the Ku Klux Klan – next to Lake Bellfield at the foot of the Grampians in western Victoria.

Tourists and locals heard the group chanting “white power” and Nazi slogans.

Halls Gap resident James told The Age and the Herald that when he passed the group on his mountain bike he was addressed with a Sieg Heil.

“There were 40 white males, many with skinheads, some chanting ‘white power’. That is intimidating for anyone, let alone the young Asian families sharing the barbecue space,” James said.

Alleged members of a far-right extremist group seen at Halls Gap and the Grampians.

Alleged members of a far-right extremist group seen at Halls Gap and the Grampians.

“They looked like Nazis from a Hitler movie,” a Halls Gap cafe owner said of her experience confronting the group of men on the Australia Day weekend. “And they were.”

Victoria Police’s counter terrorism command is responsible for investigating incidents of terrorism and communal violence that relate to differences based on ideology, politics and religion.

Mr Sewell has in the past sought to distance his group from those who espouse violent action.

His social media posts indicate that he is a racist conspiracy theorist appealing to marginalised, underemployed young Australians on the fringes of society. He is also ex-Australian Army.

Channel Nine and The Age are both owned by Nine Entertainment Co.

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