Marin Independent Journal

Agent: Virginia governor also mentioned in kidnapping plot

- By David Eggert and Kathleen Foody and John Flesher

GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. » Members of anti- government paramilita­ry groups implicated in an alleged plot to kidnap Michigan’s governor ahead of the November election because of her measures to slow the coronaviru­s also discussed abducting Virginia’s governor, an FBI agent testified Tuesday.

The disclosure came during a federal court hearing in Grand Rapids, where agent Richard Trask revealed new details about investigat­ors’ use of confidenti­al informants, undercover agents and encrypted communicat­ion to thwart the purported scheme to abduct Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

A judge ordered three of six men charged in the case held without bond until trial, delaying rulings on two defendants. Another was ordered returned to Michigan from Delaware.

“They discussed possible targets, taking a sitting governor, specifical­ly issues with the governor ofMichigan and Virginia based on the lockdown orders” they had issued to deal with the pandemic, Trask said, referring to a June6meeti­ng in Dublin, Ohio, attended by roughly 15 members of anti- government groups from “four or five states.” A criminal complaint said at least two of the defendants were among them.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if talk of targeting Virginia’s Democratic governor, RalphNorth­am, continued beyond the meeting. Nothing fromthe complaint or Trask’s testimony indicated that anyone had been charged with plotting against Northam.

But the mention of another governor who, like Whitmer, has drawn attacks from President Donald Trump — and the alleged intent to carry out the kidnapping shortly before the bitterly divisive U. S. election — escalated political tension surroundin­g the case. Trump urged supporters to “LIBERATE” Michigan, Virginia and Minnesota in a series of

tweets in April, encouragin­g protesters who turned up at state Capitols to oppose restrictio­ns aimed at minimizing the spread of the virus.

Trump falsely claimed in a recent interview on Fox News that Northam, a supporter of abortion rights, had “executed a baby.”

The president “regularly encourages violence against those who disagree with him,” Northam’s spokeswoma­n, Alena Yarmosky, said in a statement Tuesday. “The rhetoric coming out of this White House has serious and potentiall­y deadly consequenc­es. It must stop.”

Whitmer and others have similarly accused Trump of emboldenin­g extremists.

Following the arrests last week, theWhite House said the president has condemned hate, and Trump tweeted: “I do not tolerate ANY extreme violence.”

Northam said during a news conference he and his family felt safe with security Virginia’s state police provide, and that he had been threatened before. His protection was tightened this year after he signed gun control legislatio­n.

“I’mcontinuin­gmy work for the commonweal­th as I

would any other day,” he said.

Yarmosky said the FBI had alerted key members of Northam’s security team during the investigat­ion. But in keeping with security protocols for highly classified informatio­n, neither the governor normembers of his staff were informed.

During the hearing in Grand Rapids, Magistrate Judge Sally Berens ordered Kaleb Franks, Daniel Harris and Brandon Caserta held without bond. She said she would rule later on Adam Fox and Ty Garbin. All five are fromMichig­an.

The sixth defendant, Delaware resident Barry Croft, was ordered transferre­d to Michigan during a separate proceeding.

Trask, the FBI agent, testified that authoritie­s learned of the Junemeetin­g in Ohio while investigat­ing various anti- government groups. Authoritie­s have said the men wanted to retaliate against Whitmer because of what they considered her “uncontroll­ed power” during the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Trask said Fox, whom investigat­ors describe as a ringleader and was the only defendant without a mask

at the hearing, had said during a post-arrest interview he’d considered taking Whitmer fromher vacation home out onto Lake Michigan and stranding her there on a disabled boat.

According to the complaint, Fox also spoke of taking her to “a secure location inWisconsi­n for ‘ trial.’”

Some defendants conducted surveillan­ce of her northern Michigan house in August and September, according to the complaint. Authoritie­s said four of the men had planned to meet last week to pay for explosives and exchange tactical gear.

Several defense attorneys suggested during cross- examinatio­n that their clients were “big talkers” who didn’t intend to follow through with action.

When investigat­ing paramilita­ry-type groups, “you find a lot of people who talk about things, but they’re never a threat to do anything. It’s fairly common in these groups?” Scott Graham, attorney for Franks, asked Trask. “Big talk between crackpots — you’ve seen that, haven’t you? People who talk a lot, brashly, boldly, but are never going to do anything about that talk.”

 ?? BOB BROWN — RICHMOND TIMES-DISPATCH ?? On Sept. 1, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam answers a reporter’s question during a news briefing in Richmond, Va.
BOB BROWN — RICHMOND TIMES-DISPATCH On Sept. 1, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam answers a reporter’s question during a news briefing in Richmond, Va.

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