Accused militia members arraigned on domestic terrorism charges in
Michigan
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[October 10, 2020]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - Six men arrested on suspicion
of taking part in a plot by armed extremists to kidnap Michigan's
governor have been arraigned on domestic terrorism and weapons charges,
while a seventh awaits extradition from South Carolina, authorities said
on Friday.
All seven, described by prosecutors as members or associates of an
anti-government militia group called the Wolverine Watchmen, were taken
into custody late on Wednesday as part of a joint state-federal
investigation.
They are accused of conspiring to abduct Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a
Democrat who has clashed sharply with Republican U.S. President Donald
Trump over her COVID-19 public health orders.
Prosecutors say the men also sought to single out law enforcement
officers for intimidation, made threats of violence to incite civil
unrest, and trained for an operation to storm the Michigan State Capitol
in Lansing and take government officials hostage.
"Clearly this was not just talk," Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel
said in a CBS News interview on Friday. "These were many overt actions.
And so we thought it was time to move in before anybody lost their
lives."
Nessel said the governor was informed of the investigation and briefed
on developments over the past couple of months.
"At times, she and her family had been moved around as a result of
activities that law enforcement was aware of," Nessel added.
$10 MILLION BOND
Each of the seven men named in criminal complaints filed by Nessel's
office is charged with providing material support for terrorist acts and
possessing a firearm in the commission of a felony - both punishable by
up to 20 years in prison.
Two of them - Pete Musico, 46, and Joseph Morrison, 26 - were
additionally charged with belonging to a criminal gang and with
committing a threat of terrorism. At their arraignment on Thursday,
Musico and Morrison were each ordered to remain jailed on a $10 million
cash bond, the attorney general's office said in a statement.
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A combination of Antrim County Sheriff's Office police mugshots
shows William Null, Eric Molitor, Michael Null and Shawn Fix, four
of thirteen men arrested on October 7, 2020 on charges of conspiring
to kidnap the Michigan governor, attack the state legislature and
threaten law enforcement. Antrim County Sheriff's Office/Handout via
REUTERS
Bond for each of the four others was set at $250,000. Michigan
prosecutors are working to extradite the seventh defendant from
South Carolina, where he was arrested, the statement said. He, too,
is charged with gang membership.
Various additional pretrial court proceedings were set for later
this month, but no mention was made of any pleas being entered.
In addition to the seven suspects held on state charges, six men
were arrested on federal charges of conspiring to kidnap the
governor, for which they could face life in prison if convicted.
Michigan, a key swing state in the 2020 presidential race, became a
focus of agitation earlier this year by Trump and his supporters,
including various militia groups, who opposed strict stay-at-home
orders imposed by Whitmer to curb the spread of the coronavirus.
At least three of the defendants charged by the state were among
hundreds of protesters, many carrying weapons, who entered the
Michigan capitol on April 30 as state lawmakers debated Whitmer's
request to extend her emergency public health authority. Photos show
all three men were armed.
Both Whitmer and Nessel accused Trump of inflammatory rhetoric that
they said has fostered a climate of racism and political extremism.
Trump lashed back by calling Whitmer the "lockdown queen" while
denying he was encouraging violence or racism.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Andrew Hay in Taos, N.M.; editing by Bill Tarrant and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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