MILWAUKEE >> A Wisconsin teenager charged in the deaths of his parents faces wider allegations that he killed them to “obtain the financial means” to assassinate President Donald Trump and begin a “political revolution”, according to a recently unsealed federal warrant.

Nikita Casap, 17, was charged last month by Waukesha County authorities with first-degree murder, theft and other crimes in the deaths of his mother, Tatiana Casap, and his stepfather, Donald Mayer.

Authorities allege the teenager fatally shot them at their home outside Milwaukee in February and lived with the decomposing bodies for weeks before fleeing with $14,000 cash, passports and the family dog.

He was arrested on Feb. 28, in Wakeeney, Kansas, and police found a gun, ammunition, U.S. currency and Euros inside the car, according to the court document.

Casap, in custody at the Waukesha County jail on a $1 million bond, is due in court next month to enter a plea. County prosecutors have offered a glimpse of the federal allegations, which were outlined in an FBI warrant unsealed Friday.Manifesto praising Hitler

Federal authorities accuse Casap of planning his parents’ murders, buying a drone and explosives, and sharing his plans with others, including a Russian speaker. His intentions are detailed in a three-page antisemitic manifesto praising Adolf Hitler. The warrant filed at the federal court in Milwaukee also contains excerpts of communications on TikTok and the Telegram messenger app.

Investigators found message conversations between Casap and others where he discussed being affiliated with the Order of Nine Angles, a “network of individuals holding neo-Nazi racially motivated extremist views,” according to the affidavit.

“Casap appears to have written a manifest calling for the assassination of the President of the United States. He was in touch with other parties about his plan to kill the President and overthrow the government of the United States,” the search warrant says. “The killing of his parents appeared to be an effort to obtain the financial means and autonomy necessary to carrying out his plan.”

In court, prosecutors alleged Casap was in touch with a person who speaks Russian and shared a plan to flee to Ukraine.

Federal prosecutors alleged Casap’s manifesto outlined his reasons for wanting to kill Trump and included ideas about how he would live in Ukraine.

The three-page manifesto talked about the white race surviving, and Trump and the vice president’s deaths causing “chaos,” according to the affidavit.

Investigators also found a message conversation between Nikita Casap and a Ukrainian phone number, the court document said.

Nikita Casap asks “How long will I need to hide before I will be moved to Ukraine?” and he talks about learning Russian and having a “normal job” and “normal life” in Ukraine, the affidavit said.

In another message conversation with the username “@AngelOfDeath” Nikita Casap discussed a drone that would drop a bomb with nuts, bolts and needles and payment for it, according to the court records.

Phone and online messages seeking comment were left Sunday for Casap’s public defender, Nicole Ostrowski. In court last month, she moved to dismiss some of the charges against her client, including theft, arguing that prosecutors had not laid out their case. She’s also noted her client’s age during court proceedings.

“He is young, he is still in high school,” she said on March 12.

Parents killed earlier

County authorities also charged Casap with hiding a corpse, theft and misappropriating identification to obtain money.

Officers found the bodies of Tatiana Casap, 35; and Mayer, 51, on Feb. 28. Family members requested a well-being check after Mayer didn’t report for work and Nikita Casap skipped school for about two weeks. During that time, he was communicating with his school, Mayer’s job and family members from his parents’ accounts, court records said.

Authorities believe the parents were killed weeks earlier, on Feb. 11. Prosecutors said in court that the couple’s bodies were so badly decomposed that they had to be identified through dental records.

This report includes information from McClatchy News.