A Trenton man who was wearing combat gear and had numerous guns was arrested Sunday afternoon in a wooded area off Bryant Road, Lacey Police Chief David A. Paprota said.

Lacey police were part of a multi-agency special task force combing the woods within the Greenwood Forest Wildife Management Area when they came across a 2007 Hyundai Tucson pulled off the road in the woods at 1:05 p.m., the chief said. Lacey Sgt. Paul Sullivan Jr. and Senior Officer Michael Eden then located two men about 100 yards from the vehicle, who were behaving suspiciously.

"One subject, identified as Bruce J. Post III, was wearing combat gear and gave indications of possible white-supremacist involvement," Paprota said. Police also found a cache of weapons at the scene, including an AK-47, a Walther P38 9mm handgun, eight 30-round high-capacity magazines, one 100-round drum magazine and assorted ammunition, the chief said.

Post, 42, was taken to police headquarters and charged with first-degree unlawful possession of weapons and certain persons not to possess weapons, including other charges. Post was then transported to Ocean County Jail in Toms River in lieu of $400,000 cash bail.

Post wore a Nazi uniform as a teenager and often goose-stepped around the Hamilton Township neighborhood the family lived in. Both he and his brother Joseph were connected to the 1995 murder of Andrew Whited. White was found frozen in the woods with 29 stab wounds, according the Investigation Discovery documentary "Evil Kin: Brothers in Arms"

Charges are pending against the second man, a 38-year-old from Hamilton, Paprota said.

The task force was made up of law enforcement officers from the Lacey Township Police Department with the assistance of the Ocean Township Police Department, the New Jersey State Police, the Ocean County Sheriff's Department, the New Jersey State Park Police, and the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife. The vehicle belonging to Post was impounded for further processing, the chief said.