From left: Jacob Oliver Kaderli, Michael John Helterbrand and Luke Austin Lane face charges of conspiracy to commit murder and participation in a criminal gang known as The Base, police said.
CNN  — 

Three Georgia men allegedly involved in a white supremacist group known as The Base have been arrested, the Floyd County Police Department announced Friday, one day after three other alleged group members were arrested in other parts of the country.

The men – identified as Luke Austin Lane, 21; Michael John Helterbrand, 25; and Jacob Kaderli, 19 – allegedly had plans to overthrow the government and kill a couple in Bartow County, police said in a news release.

All three face charges of conspiracy to commit murder and participation in a criminal gang, The Base, police said.

“The group was involved in recruiting new members online, meeting to discuss strategy and practicing in paramilitary training camps on a 100-acre tract in Silver Creek,” where the group allegedly had a “training camp,” police said, citing their investigation with the FBI.

According to an affidavit, the three allegedly discussed “the creation of a white ethno-state” and “committing acts of violence against minority communities (including African-Americans and Jewish-Americans)” in encrypted online chat rooms.

The group is suspected of planning to kill a couple who they believed to be members of Antifa, the affidavit said. Lane allegedly concocted a plan to carry out with Helterbrand and Kaderli, but they delayed the scheme because Helterbrand had a bad back.

CNN was unable to immediately determine Friday afternoon whether Lane, Helterbrand and Kaderli had attorneys who would comment on their behalves.

Wisconsin man conspired to vandalize minority-owned property

A Wisconsin man was arrested Friday for conspiring with other members of The Base in September to vandalize minority-owned property.

Yousef O. Barasneh, 22, of Oak Creek, Wisconsin, is alleged to be a member of The Base and has been charged with conspiring to violate citizens’ rights to use property free from threats and intimidation, according to a statement from the US attorney’s office for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.

Barasneh allegedly vandalized the Beth Israeli Sinai Congregation in Racine, Wisconsin, by spray-painting swastikas and anti-Semitic words on the outside of the synagogue, the statement said.

If convicted of the charge, Barasneh faces up to 10 years in prison and up to $250,000 in fines, the statement said.

Three suspected members arrested in Virginia ahead of pro-gun rally

On Thursday, three other alleged members of The Base were arrested in Delaware and Maryland, the FBI said. They face multiple firearms and immigration-related offenses.

The men were believed to have been planning to attend a pro-gun rally in Richmond, Virginia, on Monday that’s expected to draw a crowd of extremists, according to a law enforcement official.

Brian Lemley, Patrik Mathews, and William Bilbrough, all members of a neo-Nazi group, had their initial appearances before U.S. Magistrate Judge Charles B. Day in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt, Maryland, on Thursday, January 16.

They were identified as Brian Mark Lemley Jr., 33; William Garfield Bilbrough IV, 19, and Patrik Jordan Matthews, a 27-year-old Canadian citizen and former combat engineer in the Canadian Army Reserve who was accused of entering the US illegally in August.

In court Thursday afternoon, a federal judge ordered that they remain in custody ahead of a detention hearing next week.

According to the criminal complaint in that case, members of The Base have discussed creating a white ethno-state and attacking African Americans and Jewish people. Group members have also talked about ways to build bombs and the military-style training camps the group runs, the complaint says.

CNN’s David Shortell contributed to this report.