A figure from America’s online far-right ecosystem has been convicted in a London court for a vicious assault on a fellow passenger during a rush-hour Tube journey, a case that security experts say highlights a worrying transatlantic gap in how the two nations track and prosecute politically motivated violence.
Daniel Johnson, 34, a US citizen with a substantial social media following in MAGA-aligned circles, was found guilty yesterday of grievous bodily harm after a video captured him punching a 27-year-old commuter in the face, breaking their jaw, during an argument over social distancing on the Victoria Line. The victim, a London-based civil servant, was left with lasting neurological damage.
The Metropolitan Police’s Counter Terrorism Command was called in early, citing the suspect’s online glorification of far-right violence. Yet intelligence sources indicate that the FBI had been monitoring Johnson since 2021, when he attended a rally where firearms were brandished. No arrest was made, and US authorities did not flag him to UK counterparts before his flight to London last month.
“This is a gap that cannot be sustained,” said Dr. Helena Vance, noting that the UK operates a ‘Prevent’ strategy that requires police to act on early indicators, whereas the US First Amendment protects hate speech until it turns into direct incitement. “Johnson’s online presence was a trail of red flags. The signals existed on both sides, but the response mechanisms were misaligned.”
The case magnifies a broader challenge: extremist influencers who straddle both nations, using US platforms to radicalise and UK geography to act. Johnson had posted in encrypted groups about London being “soft on free speech”. The attack itself was filmed by his own accomplices, who have also been charged.
“We are seeing a friction,” said Vance. “The US treats domestic extremism as a matter for local police, and international extremism as a matter for intelligence agencies. The UK treats radicalisation as a public health problem. Those worldviews collide when a US citizen who has not committed a crime under US law becomes a violent offender under UK law.”
The Met’s lead investigator, DCI Sarah Chen, confirmed that Johnson’s pre-travel behaviour was “consistent with someone preparing for violence”, including stockpiling military-style gear in a London flat. But without prior warning from US agencies, officers were left to intercept him only after the assault, a delay that the victim’s family has called “unforgivable”.
The question now is whether the case spurs a formal information-sharing pact. For Vance, the answer lies not in bureaucracy but in physics. “Information travels at the speed of light. Our institutions do not. The lag between a tweet and an attack is measurable in days. We need to close that gap or watch these collisions become routine.”
Johnson is expected to be sentenced next month, with deportation likely after service of a prison term. His conviction is a victory for UK justice, but alarm bells are ringing about the wider security architecture that let him slip through.
The evidence is in the data. The cost is in human suffering. The time to act is now, measured in the smallest unit of all: the interval between one attack and the next.








