Oregon Leftists Throw Masked Strip-Club Bash To Bankroll Convicted Antifa Terror Cell

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Left-wing activists in Oregon are organizing a strip-club style fundraiser to support convicted members of an Antifa-linked terrorist cell responsible for a violent attack on a Texas immigration detention facility.

According to Western Journal, the Willamette Valley Abolition Project has announced an event in Eugene titled Sluts 4 Prairieland Defendants, promoted on Instagram as a benefit for 16 individuals convicted in connection with a July 2025 shooting at the federal Prairieland Detention Facility for migrants in Alvarado, Texas. The event is being marketed not as a sober legal fundraiser, but as a party, with organizers urging supporters to come to the roadshow for updates about the prairieland case, stay for the strippers, and then dance your little heart out at the new, super cutty venue at 805 Lincoln!

Prosecutors say the case centers on an Antifa-aligned cell that turned a planned protest into a violent assault on federal property and law enforcement. Seven defendants entered guilty pleas to terrorism-related charges for aiding the group behind the attack, while a jury in March convicted nine others of terrorism, attempted murder, and additional serious offenses.

The Instagram promotion makes clear the event is designed to shield participants from scrutiny, describing the gathering as a masked event and specifying that the stripper portion of the evening is 21+. Proceeds are slated for the DFW Support Committee, a Texas-based organization created to bankroll the defendants legal defense and to stage public-relations efforts aimed at persuading the public that the convicted extremists are victims rather than perpetrators.

Federal investigators determined that several defendants converged on the Prairieland Detention Facility on the night of July 4 as part of a premeditated action that quickly escalated beyond protest. The mob launched fireworks and defaced federal property before ringleader Benjamin Song allegedly opened fire on a police officer, according to prosecutors.

Law enforcement officers arrested several suspects at the scene and then launched a broader manhunt for additional participants, including Song, who remained at large for 11 days before being captured. Officials have emphasized that those convicted include both individuals physically present during the riot and others who allegedly helped Song and his associates evade accountability in the days that followed.

The prosecution represents the first Department of Justice case explicitly targeting Antifa following President Donald Trumps designation of the movement as a domestic terrorist organization in September. Two additional individuals now face state-level charges in Johnson County for allegedly obstructing the investigation into what authorities describe as an anti-deportation riot, according to reports and court filings.

Song and the eight co-defendants convicted at trial have not yet been sentenced and are seeking to overturn the jurys verdicts. Court records show they have filed motions for acquittal or, failing that, for a new trial, arguing that the evidence and legal standards were insufficient.

Federal prosecutors have sharply rejected those claims, accusing the defendants of asking the court to usurp the role of the jury. Their motions are attempts to get this Court to act as the thirteenth juror, to second guess the jurys verdict under the guise of legal and factual insufficiency, the DOJ wrote in an April filing, adding, Their motions also fail to show any error occurred at trial that would be a miscarriage of justice to let the jurys verdict stand.

Jurors were presented with more than 200 pieces of evidence, including firearms, surveillance video, and internal materials from the Antifa cell that urged Peaceful Protest no more, as the Daily Caller News Foundation previously reported. Defense attorneys had initially signaled plans to call several left-leaning experts who routinely minimize Antifas threat, but ultimately chose not to put any of them on the stand.

While activists in Oregon prepare to raise money with a sexually charged, masked event for those convicted of terrorism and attempted murder, federal authorities maintain that the case is a textbook example of political extremism crossing the line into organized violence. The contrast between a justice system that marshaled extensive evidence to secure convictions and a radical support network that glamorizes the offenders underscores a broader ideological divide over law, order, and the growing tolerance on the left for street-level militancy masquerading as abolition or anti-deportation activism.