The Boston Globe

Men who aided Mich. governor kidnap plotter sentenced

3 given longest prison terms so far in scheme

- By Joey Cappellett­i and Ed White

JACKSON, Mich. — A judge on Thursday handed down the longest prison terms so far in the plot to kidnap Michigan’s governor, sentencing three men who forged an early alliance with a leader of the scheme before the FBI broke it up in 2020.

Joe Morrison, Pete Musico, and Paul Bellar were not charged with having a direct role in the conspiracy. But they were members of a paramilita­ry group that trained with Adam Fox, who separately faces a possible life sentence on Dec. 27 for his federal conviction.

The trio was convicted in October of providing material support for a terrorist act, which carries a maximum term of 20 years, and two other crimes.

Musico was sentenced to a minimum of 12 years in prison, followed by his son-in-law Morrison at 10 years, and Bellar at seven. They will be eligible for release after serving those terms, but any decision rests solely with the Michigan parole board.

Speaking in a recorded video, Governor Gretchen Whitmer urged Judge Thomas Wilson to “impose a sentence that meets the gravity of the damage they have done to our democracy.”

“A conspiracy to kidnap and kill a sitting governor of the state of Michigan is a threat to democracy itself,” said Whitmer, who added that she now scans crowds for risks and worries “about the fate of everyone near me.”

Wilson presided over the first batch of conviction­s in state court, following the high-profile conspiracy conviction­s of four others in federal court. Fox and Barry Croft Jr. were described as captains of an incredible plan to snatch Whitmer from her vacation home, seeking to inspire a US civil war known as the “boogaloo.”

Whitmer, a Democrat recently elected to a second term, was never physically harmed. Undercover FBI agents and informants were inside Fox’s group for months, and the scheme was broken up with 14 arrests in October 2020.

Someone convicted of more than one crime in Michigan typically gets prison sentences that simply run at the same time. But Wilson took the unusual step of ordering consecutiv­e sentences for Musico and Morrison, making their minimum stays longer. Besides a conviction for supporting terrorism, the three men were also convicted of a gun crime and for being members of a gang.

Musico, Morrison, and Bellar belonged to the Wolverine Watchmen. The three held gun training with Fox and shared his disgust for Whitmer, police, and public officials, especially after COVID-19 restrictio­ns disrupted the economy and triggered armed Capitol protests and antigovern­ment belligeren­ce.

They were running a “terrorism training camp in Jackson County,” Assistant Attorney General Sunita Doddamani told the judge.

The men expressed remorse, moments after Whitmer, in her video, said they had failed to take responsibi­lity.

Musico, 45, cried while acknowledg­ing a “lack of judgment.” Morrison, 28, said he was “renouncing, disavowing and detesting” anti-government ideologies. Bellar, 24, was the last to speak, publicly apologizin­g for abhorrent remarks about the governor.

“I was caught up highly in the moment,” Bellar said. “I felt I had lost a lot of camaraderi­e after being discharged from the Army. That was the reason I joined the Wolverine Watchmen in the first place.”

Defense lawyers still plan vigorous appeals. They argued at trial that the men had cut ties with Fox before the Whitmer plot came into focus by late summer of 2020; Bellar had moved to South Carolina in July.

They also didn’t travel with Fox to look for the governor’s second home or participat­e in a key training session inside a “shoot house” in Luther, Michigan.

“If Mr. Bellar wanted to be part of the kidnapping of the governor, he would have stayed here . ... He could have held on like a rock, like a tick in that apartment,” defense attorney Andrew Kirkpatric­k said.

A jury, however, returned guilty verdicts in October after hearing nine days of testimony, mostly evidence offered by federal agents and a FBI informant, Dan Chappel, who secretly recorded conversati­ons.

When the plot was foiled, Whitmer blamed then-President Donald Trump, saying he had given “comfort to those who spread fear and hatred.”

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