In the early 1980s, a small religious group settled in a remote area of Marion County, Arkansas, on 224 acres of land. The locals referred to them as "The Cedar Boys" because they only knew of the men logging and selling cedar for money. Over time, their farm underwent a significant transformation, from a small secluded commune to a full fledged militaristic compound. They adopted the name "The Covenant, The Sword, and The Arm of the Lord" (CSA) and emerged as one of America's first modern domestic terrorist threats. Equipped with weapons such as rocket launchers, land mines, a tank, grenades, automatic firearms, and even a 30-gallon barrel of cyanide intended for use as a weapon of mass destruction, this once obscure group of cedar loggers soon gained nationwide notoriety. The CSA was linked of a wide range of criminal activities, including the murder of police officers, the manufacture of illegal firearms, arson and bombings of synagogues and infrastructure, counterfeiting, theft, and fraud. Many speculate that they were the architects behind one of the deadliest domestic terrorist attacks in American history—the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.