A Parker woman is accused of planning a raid to kidnap her child with help from a far-right conspiracy group, according to an affidavit filed by the Parker Police Department.

Cynthia Abcug , 50, who does not have custody of her child, is accused of plotting the raid to take the child back with help from QAnon, a conspiracy group that believes an anonymous government official called “Q” is revealing secret information on an online message board about deep state efforts against President Donald Trump.

The FBI in May classified QAnon extremists as a domestic terrorism threat, according to the affidavit.

Abcug was arrested Dec. 30 in Montana on suspicion of conspiracy to commit kidnapping, according to the affidavit. The warrant for her arrest was issued in September, after her daughter warned authorities about her mother’s behavior and Abcug’s plan to kidnap her other child. The warrant was issued after Abcug failed to show for a custody hearing and stopped communicating with police.

The daughter told authorities that Abcug was living with an “armed man” who was a member of QAnon and who acted as a bodyguard for Abcug, and said her mother rarely left the house. When she did, according to the affidavit, it was to meet with members of QAnon.

The daughter said Abcug kept a number of guns in her Parker home and had planned to practice shooting one weapon at a firing range. Officials learned Abcug had become interested in conspiracy theories, according to the affidavit, and “was spiraling down.”

The daughter was concerned that people might get hurt during the planned raid, according to the affidavit.

Parker police watched Abcug’s home on Sept. 27 for about five hours in an attempt to identify the armed man she’d been living with, but did not see anyone go in or out and concluded at that time that Abcug’s whereabouts were unknown.

After Abcug was arrested in Montana, she was held on a $250,000 bond. Her court dates in Douglas County will be set after she is transported to Colorado.