🔗 Share this article American Man Linked to Australian Gunmen Secures Plea Bargain with Federal Attorneys A US man linked with the perpetrators behind the deadly Wieambilla, Australia attack that took the lives of six individuals – including two Queensland police officers – has accepted a watered-down plea agreement. Resident of Arizona Donald Day Jr. will face court on October 21 after striking the plea deal with US prosecutors. The individual with prior convictions, known online as “Geronimo's Bones”, is expected to plead guilty to a sole offense of illegally owning guns and bullets in a deal to be sanctioned by the judiciary in the current month. Links to Australian Shooters Investigators established clear connections between Day and Gareth and Stacey Train through digital communications. This couple, along with Nathaniel Train, murdered Queensland police officers Arnold and McCrow, and neighbor Alan Dare at a isolated location in Wieambilla, Queensland in 2022. They were fatally shot in a final shootout with law enforcement, following a protracted siege at the rural site. US prosecutors said Day communicated via online platforms with the perpetrators around the time of the deadly ambush. Day referred to Queensland officers as “malignant, malformed and malevolent”, and said they should be shown “no mercy whatsoever”, informing the Trains he desired to be at Wieambilla in person. Court documents outlined how Gareth and Stacey Train had posted an apocalyptic video on YouTube after the incident, saying authorities “came to kill us and we killed them”. “Failing to stand against these evil forces makes one a coward … We will meet you at home, Don. With love,” they expressed. Firearms Cache and Court Case Court documents reveal Day stockpiled a collection of multiple powerful guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition at a rural property in Heber, Arizona, that was outfitted with a shooting range, weapons room and sniper’s nest. “The firearms and ammunition were kept in the mobile home I shared with S.S., in a room we called the ‘gun room’,” Day said in the agreement submitted in the legal system. Day said he frequently used both the weapons storage and the firearms, and also instructed others on how to use the firearms correctly. The bargain will result in charges dropped that pertain to the alleged issuing threats to officials and federal agents. According to court documents, Day had been banned from possessing weapons and firearms because of his history of violent crimes. Day, who has completed 24 months in custody, could receive a highest sentence of up to 15 years in prison or a penalty of US$250,000 (A$381,500), but the agreement stipulates he will be judged under the minimum range of the legal sentencing standards.