Ripples likely from militia case loss, experts say
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - This combo of seven photos provided in 2010 by the U.S. Marshals Service shows from top left: David Stone, wife Tina Stone, David Stones sons, David Jr. and Joshua all from Lenawee County, Mich. Bottom row from left; Thomas Piatek of Whiting, Ind.; Michael Meeks of Manchester, Mich.; and Kris Sickles of Sandusky, Ohio, seven members of a Michigan militia who were rounded up in 2010 as homegrown extremists accused of plotting war against the U.S. A federal judge dismissed the most serious charges against them Tuesday, March 27, 2011, saying their expressed hatred of law enforcement didn't amount to conspiracy against the government. (AP Photo/U.S. Marshall) (Credit: AP)DETROIT (AP) — The stunning acquittal of seven Michigan militia members charged with conspiring to go to war against the government could make federal agents reluctant to pursue certain investigations at a time when the number of so-called patriot groups is increasing nationwide, experts said Wednesday.
The FBI ran an 18-month probe of the Hutaree militia, placed an informant and undercover agent inside the group and emerged with major charges of conspiring to rebel against the government and use weapons of mass destruction.
After six weeks of trial, however, a judge this week said the case didn’t even deserve to go to the jury and declared all seven not guilty.
“It’s an embarrassment to the government to lose this case,” said Mark Potok, who tracks extremist groups at the Southern Poverty Law Center, a noted civil rights organization in Birmingham, Ala. “I very much worry this could discourage officials from moving forward on the most open-and-shut cases in the future. I’m not trying to criticize the judge at all, but it might have ramifications.”
Potok said most members of militias never will commit a crime but the “militia movement has produced an enormous level of criminal violence.” The law center counted more than 1,200 anti-government groups last year and lists them on its website. The FBI recently said it is focusing on “sovereign citizen” extremists who don’t recognize government authority.
For weeks, jurors in Detroit heard secretly recorded conversations between militia leader David Stone and an FBI informant and agent. He talked about killing police, building bombs and engaging an international coalition of freedom-hating law enforcers and foreign troops he called the “brotherhood.”
For two years, from the day Stone and others were swept up in a series of highly publicized raids mostly in southern Michigan, federal authorities said the Hutaree wanted to kill an officer, attack the funeral, cause chaos in the countryside and launch war against the government. But prosecutors this week acknowledged there was no specific plan — an admission that clearly irritated the judge.
“What the government has shown, instead of a concrete agreement and plan to forcibly oppose the authority of the government, is that most — if not all — of these defendants held strong anti-government sentiments,” Roberts said in a 28-page decision. “But the court must not guess about what defendants intended to do with their animosity.”




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