FBI arrest 6 men in a militia plot to kidnap Michigan governor who also wanted to kill police officers.

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://apnews.com/article/2022-midterm-elections-health-covid-michigan-gretchen-whitmer-3b2434fe6c5c4db00b8bea3b5f1a6ec0
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JACKSON, Mich. (AP) — A scheme to kidnap Michigan’s governor in 2020 will get yet another airing in a different court when three men face trial Monday, just weeks before voters consider whether to reelect Gretchen Whitmer to a second term.

Fourteen men were arrested two years ago, disrupting what one participant said was a plan to incite a U.S. civil war known as the “boogaloo.” But not all were treated the same. Federal prosecutors focused on six who were considered to be key players, while Michigan authorities handled the rest.

A look at the issues:

WHAT HAPPENED IN 2020?

The government said it broke up a plot to kidnap Whitmer, a Democrat, from her vacation home in northern Michigan. For months, undercover FBI agents and informants were embedded among anti-government extremists who trained in Wisconsin and Michigan and made trips to scope out her property.

Investigators secretly recorded hate-filled conversations about Whitmer and other public officials who were denounced as tyrants, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic when businesses were shut down, people were ordered to stay home and schools were closed.

Ty Garbin and Kaleb Franks pleaded guilty in federal court in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and testified against four others. The alleged leaders, Barry Croft and Adam Fox, were convicted in August, while two more men were acquitted last spring.

WHO’S FACING TRIAL NOW?

Joe Morrison, father-in-law Pete Musico and Paul Bellar are charged in Jackson County, Michigan, with three crimes, including providing material support for terrorist acts, which carries a maximum prison sentence of 20 years. They’re accused of forming an alliance with Fox and others through their paramilitary group, the Wolverine Watchmen.

Jackson County is where gun drills and other training with Fox occurred.

“They didn’t go out and participate in a plan to kidnap the governor,” Assistant Attorney General Sunita Doddamani said in court in 2021. “Their group provided the motive, means and opportunity for those individuals that did do so.”

Mark Chutkow, a former federal prosecutor in Detroit, said dividing the cases between state and federal authorities made sense.

“The state attorney general has carved out a piece of the conspiracy where you have three people working in concert in Jackson County,” Chutkow told The Associated Press. “That’s a story that’s digestible, that a jury can get its arms around, and a story more easily translated than scooping everyone up” in federal court.

WHAT IS THE DEFENSE?

Lawyers for Morrison, Musico and Bellar say the men cut ties with Fox before the kidnapping plot accelerated in summer 2020; Bellar had moved to South Carolina.

They plan to sharply question an important witness, Dan Chappel, an Army veteran who said he joined the Wolverine Watchmen to maintain his gun skills but was distressed over talk about attacking police. He agreed to stay in the group and become an FBI informant.

The men claim they were entrapped by Chappel and his FBI handlers, though Garbin, another likely witness for prosecutors, will knock that down.

Any weapons drills simply were to prepare for “potential civil unrest in the United States,” said Bellar’s lawyer, Andrew Kirkpatrick.

But a judge who found enough evidence to send the men to trial likened the Wolverine Watchmen to a minor league baseball team where players are trained to join the “big leagues.”

“Unfortunately, the big leagues was something extremely heinous and illegal,” Judge Michael Klaeren said last year.

TRIAL AND POLITICS:

The kidnapping plot hadn’t been mentioned much in Michigan’s gubernatorial race until Republican candidate Tudor Dixon seemed to make light of it during a Sept. 23 campaign appearance.

“The sad thing is, Gretchen will tie your hands, put a gun to your head and ask if you’re ready to talk,” Dixon said, apparently a reference to Whitmer’s pandemic policies. “For someone so worried about being kidnapped, Gretchen Whitmer sure is good at taking business hostage and holding it for ransom.”

The Whitmer campaign said threats of violence were “no laughing matter.”
 

hanimmal

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https://apnews.com/article/michigan-gretchen-whitmer-jackson-adam-fox-kidnap-plot-trial-0a5a930cf86e74f8a1365040b783de0d?utm_source=homepage&utm_medium=TopNews&utm_campaign=position_04
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Three men accused of supporting a plot to kidnap Michigan’s governor were convicted of all charges Wednesday, a triumph for state prosecutors after months of mixed results in the main case in federal court.

Joe Morrison, his father-in-law Pete Musico, and Paul Bellar were found guilty of providing “material support” for a terrorist act as members of a paramilitary group, the Wolverine Watchmen.

They held gun drills in rural Jackson County with a leader of the scheme, Adam Fox, who was disgusted with Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and other officials in 2020 and said he wanted to kidnap her.

Jurors read and heard violent, anti-government screeds as well as support for the “boogaloo,” a civil war that might be triggered by a shocking abduction. Prosecutors said COVID-19 restrictions ordered by Whitmer turned out to be fruit to recruit more people to the Watchmen.

“The facts drip out slowly,” state Assistant Attorney General Bill Rollstin told jurors in Jackson, Michigan, “and you begin to see — wow — there were things that happened that people knew about. ... When you see how close Adam Fox got to the governor, you can see how a very bad event was thwarted.”

Morrison, 28, Musico, 44, and Bellar, 24, were also convicted of a gun crime and membership in a gang. Prosecutors said the Wolverine Watchmen was a criminal enterprise.

Morrison, who recently tested positive for COVID-19, and Musico watched the verdict by video away from the courtroom. Judge Thomas Wilson ordered all three to jail while they await sentencing scheduled for Dec. 15.

Defense attorneys argued that the three men had broken ties with Fox by late summer 2020 when the Whitmer plot came into focus. Unlike Fox and others, they didn’t travel to northern Michigan to scout the governor’s vacation home or participate in a key weekend training session inside a “shoot house.”

“In this country, you are allowed to talk the talk but you only get convicted if you walk the walk,” Musico’s attorney, Kareem Johnson, said in his closing remarks.

Defense lawyers couldn’t argue entrapment. But they attacked the tactics of Dan Chappel, an Army veteran and undercover informant. He took instructions from FBI agents, secretly recorded conversations and produced a deep cache of messages exchanged with the men.

Whitmer, a Democrat running for reelection on Nov. 8, was never physically harmed. Undercover agents and informants were inside Fox’s group for months. The scheme was broken up with 14 arrests in October 2020.

Fox and Barry Croft Jr. were convicted of a kidnapping conspiracy in federal court in August. Daniel Harris and Brandon Caserta were acquitted last spring. Ty Garbin and Kaleb Franks pleaded guilty.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://apnews.com/article/gretchen-whitmer-crime-michigan-grand-rapids-adam-fox-ace2060b595fe6bb610393c831b234fe
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Federal prosecutors told a judge Monday that a life prison sentence would be justified for the leader of a plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, saying his goal to turn the country upside down in 2020 was a forerunner of rampant anti-government extremism.

“If our elected leaders must live in fear, our representative government suffers. A plan to kidnap and harm the governor of Michigan is not only a threat to the officeholder but to democracy itself,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Nils Kessler wrote.

Adam Fox “fanatically embraced the cause and persistently pushed his recruits to action,” Kessler said.

The court filing in Grand Rapids, Michigan, came a week before U.S. District Judge Robert Jonker is scheduled to sentence Fox for conspiracy crimes. He and co-defendant Barry Croft Jr. were convicted in August.

Fox’s attorney hadn’t filed a sentencing memo yet. At trial, Christopher Gibbons portrayed him as hapless and virtually homeless, a man with a loud, vile mouth who was living in the basement of a Grand Rapids-area vacuum shop.

Jonker has much flexibility in determining Fox’s punishment, though Kessler noted that his sentencing score is “off the chart,” greatly enhanced by a conviction for conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction in the scheme.

“The guidelines provide for a life sentence because Congress recognized kidnapping is an extremely serious offense,” Kessler said. “When the aim of that kidnapping is to terrorize the people and affect the conduct of government, it is so pernicious that only the most serious sanction is sufficient.”

In 33 pages, the prosecutor highlighted what FBI agents and informants revealed at trial, repeatedly citing Fox’s own violent words, which were secretly recorded or plucked from text messages and social media.

“Fox’s plot was a harbinger of more widespread anti-government militia extremism,” Kessler said.

Fox and others trained with guns inside crudely built “shoot houses” in Wisconsin and Michigan and made trips to Elk Rapids to scout Whitmer’s second home. The strategy included blowing up a bridge to slow down police officers responding to an abduction, according to evidence. The FBI broke up the plan with arrests in October 2020.

The government said Fox’s rage at elected officials was fueled by Whitmer’s COVID-19 restrictions.

“We want a revolutionary war,” he said in a June 2020 video. “We want to get rid of this corrupt, tyrannical ... government. That’s what we want to get rid of.”

Croft, a trucker from Bear, Delaware, will be sentenced on Dec. 28. Two more men pleaded guilty to the kidnapping conspiracy and testified against Fox and Croft, while two other men were acquitted last spring.

In October, in state court, three members of a paramilitary group called the Wolverine Watchmen were convicted of providing support for Fox.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Budley Doright

Well-Known Member
The courts need to send a strong message to all of these assholes, including those who make death threats, a terrorist act. Strip off the white privilege and let the message go all the way down to orange privilege too. Once the head is chopped off the snake it tends to die.
It’s only fair. We used to skirt the state due to a possible life sentence for more than 1/4 LB :o! Would have cut a day or two off the drive :(.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
It’s only fair. We used to skirt the state due to a possible life sentence for more than 1/4 LB :o! Would have cut a day or two off the drive :(.
Generally, I don't agree with mandatory minimum sentences, but they would work quite well with suits, financial and political types, the forward thinkers. So, for some kinds of crimes where public trust is betrayed, corruption, election related stuff, etc. mandatory minimums would be a real effective deterrent considering the types of people who it would affect. They don't work so well with the weak minded, desperate and impulsive, but for politicians, public officials, business and lawyer types they will work just fine!

Life for possession of pot compared to the damage and waste these fuckers cause and largely get away with, does not compute.
 

Budley Doright

Well-Known Member
Generally, I don't agree with mandatory minimum sentences, but they would work quite well with suits, financial and political types, the forward thinkers. So, for some kinds of crimes where public trust is betrayed, corruption, election related stuff, etc. mandatory minimums would be a real effective deterrent considering the types of people who it would affect. They don't work so well with the weak minded, desperate and impulsive, but for politicians, public officials, business and lawyer types they will work just fine!

Life for possession of pot compared to the damage and waste these fuckers cause and largely get away with, does not compute.
My point!!!
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member

Good but the sentence was too short. Lot's of maga fools getting sent to the slammer. They can rant about the Constitution that they've never read. They can spread conspiracy theories that have no merit. They can scheme to overthrow the government. But at the end of the day this is The United States of America and they are getting sent to prison for being traitors and an enemies of the state.

Sixteen years is not long enough. It should have been life.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Good but the sentence was too short. Lot's of maga fools getting sent to the slammer. They can rant about the Constitution that they've never read. They can spread conspiracy theories that have no merit. They can scheme to overthrow the government. But at the end of the day this is The United States of America and they are getting sent to prison for being traitors and an enemies of the state.

Sixteen years is not long enough. It should have been life.
Laws will be changed over time and the next time it will be life and easier to give it to them. I figure the democrat's should take it all in 2024, unless America fucks itself and elects a republican as POTUS, then the fur will fly!
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Don't figure on anything you can't control.
Nobody knows the future, but at the rate the republicans are fucking up and will be going to prison, it does not look good for the party. However Desantis is a real threat if he runs against Joe and he is Trump without the glaring public defects.
 
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