On the day he was arrested last May, Montevideo militia group member Buford "Bucky" Rogers told an FBI agent that he knew a man named Keith who was involved in intelligence work for the National Guard and was also involved in militia activity, according to an FBI interview transcript made public Friday.
There is "a high probability" that the "Keith" that Rogers named is Keith Novak of Maplewood, the Guardsman and member of a militia organization who was arrested last week and charged with stealing the names and Social Security numbers of Army members as part of an identity theft scheme, according to a source who has knowledge of both cases.
The source said Novak had his security clearance removed last summer when he was under investigation.
The FBI has made no statement that the two men are linked. Both men, however, are alleged by the FBI to have spoken of bombing government facilities, although neither has been charged with such a crime.
Rogers, a member of a small group called the Black Snake Militia, planned an attack on the police station and National Guard facility and the bombing of a radio tower, all in Montevideo, the FBI alleged at the time of his arrest. He was indicted on charges of possessing illegal explosives and a firearm.
An FBI agent testified Monday that Novak belonged to the 44th Spatha Libertas or "Sword of Freedom" militia and had discussed bombing a National Security Agency facility in Utah, although he has not been charged with that. He was described in court documents as a "Human Intelligence Collector" for the Minnesota Army National Guard and an "intelligence analyst" when he was a member of the Army's 82nd Airborne Divison.
Novak's case has been forwarded to a federal grand jury for possible indictment.
Asked if the "Keith" Rogers spoke about to the FBI was Novak, Nicole Engisch, chief of the criminal division of the U.S. attorney's office in Minneapolis, which is prosecuting both cases, declined to comment.