Albany Times Union

Anti-government groups shift focus to states

Police stop kidnap plot as part of plan to instigate violence

- By John Flesher and Michael Kunzelman

The alleged foiled plot to kidnap Michigan’s governor is a jarring example of how the anti-government movement in the U.S. has become an internet-driven hodgepodge of conspiracy theorists who have redirected their rage from Washington toward state capitols.

That’s in contrast to the self-styled “militia” movement that took shape in the 1990s — loosely connected groups whose primary target was the federal government, which they considered a tyrannical force bent on seizing guns and imposing a socialist “new world order.”

Deadly standoffs between FBI agents and extremists at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and Waco, Texas, stoked those groups’ anger.

Timothy Mcveigh and Terry Nichols, convicted in the 1995 bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building that killed 168 people, were reported to have met with Michigan paramilita­ry activists.

Public revulsion over that massacre damaged the movement, which largely faded from public view. But recent protests over racial injustice, the coronaviru­s and other turmoil during the Trump administra­tion have fueled a resurgence, with paramilita­ry groups blending into a mishmash of far-right factions that spread their messages on websites and social media.

In many ways, their focus is unchanged, including contempt for authority, reverence for the Second Amendment and backwoods military-style training exercises.

But the plot targeting Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer illustrate­s one stark difference: Nowadays, much of the anger focuses on state officials whom extremists accuse of denying rights and freedoms.

“And this is largely due to the fact that Donald Trump, who the militia movement supports, is at the head of the federal government,” said Mark Pitcavage, a senior research fellow at the AntiDefama­tion League’s Center on Extremism.

“But they can much more easily be angry at state governors, especially Democratic ones, but sometimes even Republican ones, who are involved with gun-control efforts or lockdown or anti-pandemic measures,” he added.

Whitmer told The Associated Press in an interview Friday that extremism targeted at state officials is “a very real threat to democracy.”

“There’s no question that these hate groups are domestic terrorists and I think we need to call them that,” Whitmer said while greeting voters in Traverse City. “We need leadership who steps up and takes it on. We need it coming out of the White House, we need it coming out of all of our statehouse­s as well.”

Six men were charged in federal court Thursday with conspiring to kidnap the governor in retaliatio­n for what they viewed as her “uncontroll­ed power,” according to a criminal complaint. Seven others, charged in state court for allegedly seeking to storm the Michigan Capitol, are linked to a paramilita­ry group called the Wolverine Watchmen, a state affidavit said.

The Wolverine Watchmen used Facebook to recruit members and communicat­ed on an encrypted messaging platform, the affidavit said.

Supporters have shown up at protests over COVID -19 lockdown orders and demonstrat­ions over racial injustice, carrying rifles and wearing tactical gear.

The kidnapping plot wasn’t the only violence planned by Wolverine Watchmen members, according to investigat­ors. The State Police affidavit says the group was training for an attack on the Michigan state Capitol, targeting police officers and threatenin­g violence “to instigate a civil war leading to societal collapse.”

 ?? John Flesher / Associated Press ?? Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, center right, greets voters during a campaign visit to Traverse City, Mich., on Friday, the day after police announced a foiled plot to kidnap her.
John Flesher / Associated Press Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, center right, greets voters during a campaign visit to Traverse City, Mich., on Friday, the day after police announced a foiled plot to kidnap her.

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