WILLIAMSPORT -- The last of the six purported members of the Aryan Strikeforce indicted April 27 by a federal grand jury has been arrested.

Stephen Daniel Davis, 47, was arrested Friday in Bumpass, Va., where he lives. The indictment identifies him as the vice president of the white supremacist group.

The six are accused of engaging in criminal activity to obtain firearms, ammunition and funds to carry out the mission of strikeforce.

Davis, who goes by Dan, is charged with conspiracy and the illegal possession and transfer of a firearm.

He is accused of transferring a 12-gauge shotgun and a 9mm pistol to a fellow strikeforce member last October in Potter and Tioga counties.

The U.S. Middle District Court indictment states Davis and the individual to whom he transferred the weapons are convicted felons thus not permitted to possess firearms.

Those two guns, another shotgun, a .357 revolver and 50 Colt carbines are listed in the forfeiture clause of the indictment.

The defendants are alleged to have held meetings in Potter County, Harrisburg, Philipsburg, N.J., and Staunton, Va., to plan Strikeforce activities.

They are accused for receiving and storing firearms in various locations including residences in Potter County, Phillipsburg, N.J. and Allentown.

Government agents apparently had infiltrated the organization because the indictment relates incidents where the defendants were involved with members of law enforcement they believed were brokers of drugs and firearms.

Previously arraigned were Joshua Michael Steever, 27, of Manville, N.J., Henry Lambert Baird, 49, of Allentown, Justin Daniel Lough, 26, of Waynesboro, Va., Jacob Mark Robards, 40, of Bethlehem, and Connor Drew Dikes, 20, of Silver Spring, Md.

All are detained without bail except Dikes who is free on electronic monitoring.

The indictment identifies Steever at the strikeforce founder, Baird its president and Dykes its sergeant-at-arms.

Their charges include interstate travel in aid of racketeering, conspiracy to distribute and attempted distribution of controlled substances, money laundering, transport, delivery and receipt of unregistered machine guns and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

Steever is alleged to have inquired of an individual he thought was broker of legal contraband about the availability of various firearms including AK-47 rifles, Uzi machine guns and Glock and Beretta pistols for use in tactical training of strikeforce members.

Steever, Baird and Lough are accused of asking at a March 30 meeting in Harrisburg about the availability of firearms that had not been used in criminal activity.

Also discussed, according to the indictment, were opportunities through criminal activity to generate funds to buy firearms.

At an April 7 meeting in Harrisburg, Steever, Baird and Lough received from a purported contraband broker a box of 50 AR-15 components and four Glock fully automatic inserts along with a bag containing 16 pounds of simulated methamphetamine, the charges state.

The three then drove to Hagerstown, Md., where they allegedly delivered the weapons parts and methamphetamine to another purported broker and each received $1,200.

Steever and Lough are accused of buying prepaid VISA gift cards totaling $600 they gave to the "broker" to hold as payment toward future firearms purchases.

Judge Matthew W. Brann has scheduled a June 5 trial for all but Davis but it is unlikely it will be held then as defense attorneys already have begun filing pretrial motions.