San Antonio Express-News

FBI: Va. governor may have been targeted

- By Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio and Neil MacFarquha­r

Gov. Ralph Northam of Virginia was discussed as a possible target by members of an anti-government group charged last week with plotting to kidnap the Michigan governor, the FBI said on Tuesday.

During a hearing in U.S. District Court in Grand Rapids, Mich., Special Agent Richard J. Trask II of the FBI said that Northam and other officials were targeted because of their aggressive lockdown orders to restrict the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Last week, 13 men accused of involvemen­t in the alleged plot against Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan were charged with a variety of state and federal crimes including terrorism, conspiracy and weapons possession. They also talked of planning to storm the Michigan state Capitol and start a civil war, authoritie­s said.

During Tuesday’s hearing, authoritie­s said the suspects also spoke about “taking” the Virginia governor because of coronaviru­s lockdown orders that restricted businesses.

Trask said that some of the suspects held a meeting in Dublin, Ohio, several months ago where they “discussed possible targets” for “taking a sitting governor.”

The FBI alerted members of Northam’s security team throughout their investigat­ion, Alena Yarmosky, Northam’s press secretary, said in a statement. The governor was not informed, “per security protocols,” Yarmosky said, but added that “at no time was the governor or his family in imminent danger.”

Last spring, critics lambasted Whitmer, a Democrat, for her

March 24 lockdown, particular­ly since the stay-at-home orders for rural Michigan, with relatively few cases of COVID-19, were the same as those for Detroit and other cities. Conservati­ve and antigovern­ment groups in Michigan were among the first in the country to organize protests against the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

In Virginia, Northam, also a Democrat, issued a similar order on March 30, instructin­g residents to leave their homes only for work, medical attention, family care, shopping for essentials and “outdoor activity with strict social distancing requiremen­ts.” Northam started reopening much of Virginia on May 15, but as cases rose again over the summer, he implemente­d restrictio­ns on bars, restaurant­s and public gatherings.

President Donald Trump had openly encouraged right-wing protests of social distancing restrictio­ns in Virginia, Michigan and other states with stayat-home orders, right after his administra­tion had announced guidelines for governors to set their own timetables for reopening their communitie­s. Among his tweets were calls to both “Liberate Michigan!” and “Liberate Virginia.”

Yarmosky referenced the president’s tweets in the statement from Northam’s office and said that the “rhetoric coming out of this White House has serious and potentiall­y deadly consequenc­es.” She added: “It must stop.”

On Tuesday, Trask also provided additional details about the alleged plans to kidnap Whitmer. One of the suspects, Adam Fox — identified by Trask as one of the leaders of the plot — spoke about a plan to take Whitmer out on a boat in the middle of Lake Michigan, and leave her stranded with the engine disabled so that someone would have to “come rescue” her, Trask said.

The other alternativ­e had been to take Whitmer to Wisconsin or another unspecifie­d state and to put her on trial. The accused had referred to her as “a tyrant.”

Last week, authoritie­s said the men were affiliated with an extremist group called the Wolverine Watchmen, which court documents called “an anti-government, anti-law enforcemen­t militia group.”

Sally Berens, a U.S. magistrate judge, denied bail for three of the defendants after their lawyers argued that the alleged plots were more “inflammato­ry rhetoric” than substance.

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