Man sentenced to 6 years in plot to kidnap Michigan governor
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[August 26, 2021]
By Tyler Clifford
(Reuters) - A man who pleaded guilty to
charges stemming from a plot to kidnap Michigan's governor received a
sentence of just over six years in prison on Wednesday, after he also
agreed to testify against fellow extremists in the "Wolverine Watchmen"
militia who have been accused in the conspiracy.
Ty Garbin, 25, was the first to be convicted of scheming to abduct
Gretchen Whitmer, the state's first-term Democratic governor, from her
vacation home last summer. Since the FBI said it uncovered the
conspiracy by members of a militia group, more than a dozen men have
been charged in state or federal court.
U.S. District Judge Robert Jonker in Grand Rapids handed down the
sentence of 75 months Wednesday afternoon. Prosecutors had sought a
nine-year prison sentence for Garbin, who cooperated with the
government.
At the hearing, Garbin, an airplane mechanic of Hartland, Michigan, who
has no criminal history, apologized to Whitmer.
“I never realized what my actions would have caused to her, but also her
family," he told the judge. "I can’t even imagine to begin to think
about the amount of stress and fear her family felt because of my
actions, and for that I’m truly sorry.”
Garbin broke with five co-defendants in January to submit a guilty plea
to a federal kidnapping conspiracy charge. The deal included his
agreement to testify against others charged in federal and state
investigations, according to U.S. Attorney Andrew Birge.
In the plea, Garbin said he and co-defendants were a part of a
Michigan-based anti-government militia group known as the Wolverine
Watchmen. The six were arrested and charged by federal authorities last
October.
Another eight men were hit with domestic terrorism charges in Michigan
state court. All 14 are members or associates of the Wolverine Watchmen,
prosecutors say.
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Ty Garbin, one 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, is seen in a Kent
County Sheriff's Office police mugshot. Kent County Sheriff's
Office/Handout via REUTERS
Prosecutors have said the suspected participants
sought Whitmer's capture in retribution for wide-ranging public
health orders imposed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic,
including limits on social and business operations.
Whitmer, who served as a co-chair of Joe Biden's presidential
campaign, accused then-President Donald Trump of hyping up far-right
groups as he denounced COVID mitigation efforts carried out in
Democratic states.
Officials say Garbin and others took multiple steps in planning the
abduction, including a July 2020 meeting to practice using assault
rifles; conducting surveillance of the governor's vacation home; and
timing the distance to the nearest police station.
Garbin’s plea agreement also claimed that Fox, one of the alleged
ringleaders, had said at in a June meeting last year that “he wanted
to recruit 200 people to storm the (Michigan) Capitol, try any
politicians they caught for ‘treason’ and execute them by hanging on
live television.”
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford; Editing by David Gregorio)
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