Vancouver Sun

BIZARRE PLOT TWIST

B.C. woman linked to U.S. case

- KIM BOLAN kbolan@postmedia.com blog: vancouvers­un.com/tag/realscoop

A B.C. woman allegedly conspired with a Tennessee associate to kidnap a judge in that state, as well as a sheriff in Nebraska.

Details of the strange case implicatin­g Suzanne Holland were laid out at a court hearing in Tennessee on Sept. 1 during which state resident Patricia Parsons pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting solicitati­on to commit kidnapping.

Parson admitted that between February and May 2017, she conspired with Holland, who is also known as Zsuzsanna Hegedus, to kidnap the two officials.

Holland describes herself as the Chief Justice of the Universal Supreme Court of the Tsilhqot’in Nation.

Based in Williams Lake, members of the “sovereign citizens” group have already been called “vexatious” litigants by a number of B.C. judges.

Holland’s group has also been disavowed by the Tsilhqot’in National Government, which has written to both provincial and federal ministers to explain the group “does not represent or speak for the Tsilhqot’in people,” Tsilhqot’in communicat­ions manager Graham Gillies said Wednesday.

Holland has not yet been charged in the U.S. kidnapping plot. But she is in jail in B.C. after being arrested last June on some outstandin­g warrants.

Crown spokesman Dan McLaughlin said Wednesday that she is facing a variety of breach charges, mostly for failing to appear in court. A warrant was issued for her arrest in 2016.

McLaughlin said the underlying charges Holland faces “allege abduction of a person under 14 with intent to deprive the parent or guardian contrary to s. 281 and failure to provide the necessarie­s of life.”

On Aug. 9, she was ordered to stand trial on the abduction charge, but no trial date has yet been fixed, McLaughlin said.

As for the U.S. investigat­ion, a Department of Justice spokeswoma­n for the Western District of Tennessee refused to comment when contacted by Postmedia about Holland.

“We have no comment with ongoing investigat­ions,” Cherri Green said in an emailed statement.

And RCMP E Division media officer Cpl. Janelle Shoihet also declined to comment on whether Canadian police are working with their U.S. counterpar­ts.

“Generally speaking, only in the event that an investigat­ion results in the laying of criminal charges would the RCMP confirm its investigat­ion, the nature of any charges laid and the identity of the individual(s) involved,” she said in an emailed response.

The American case began after the husband of Holland’s associate, Michael Parsons, failed to appear in state court in Tipton County, Tennessee in January 2017.

He was facing two counts of being a felon in possession of a firearm. He had removed his ankle bracelet and fled, but was arrested two days later after flying a plane to a small airport in Nebraska.

On Feb. 16, the FBI’s New Orleans office received informatio­n that Holland “was attempting to hire a bounty hunter to kidnap Sheriff Kurt Kapperman of Furnas County, Neb., and Judge Joseph Walker of Tipton County, Tenn., and to break Mr. Parsons out of jail,” a U.S. Department of Justice release said.

Holland contacted an FBI confidenti­al source “and solicited the source to execute what were purported to be duly-issued ‘arrest warrants’ for the sheriff and judge issued by the Tsilhqot’in Nation,” the Department of Justice said.

She then emailed her warrants to the source along with an order to release Michael Parsons from jail.

Holland provided the FBI source with a phone number that turned out to be that of Patricia Parsons.

“Based on initial telephone conversati­ons, Ms. Holland and the source agreed to draft a contract, signed by both parties, describing duties and payments. A final negotiated price of $250,000 was agreed upon for the arrest of the sheriff and judge and the facilitati­ng release of Mike Parsons from jail,” the Department of Justice said. “Mike Parsons was described as an Associate Justice of the Tsilhqot’in Nation.”

The negotiatio­ns continued for several weeks, the U.S. documents said, with Holland telling the FBI source that Patricia Parsons would have the money and be available to meet in Memphis. Holland later asked the source to accept Parsons’ Corvette in lieu of a $5,000 down payment.

In one call, the FBI source told Patricia Parsons that the plan was to sell “the vehicle to help fund the operation; breaking Mr. Parsons out of jail; kidnapping the Tennessee judge (who was scheduled to preside over her husband’s impending trial) and the Nebraska sheriff; using the plane to transport the abducted individual­s to Holland in Canada; and using 30 operatives divided into two teams to accomplish these objectives.”

The source told Parsons that the operatives would have to go to Canada because “once we kidnap a judge and a sheriff, our heads are gonna be on the choppin’ block … and once we do what we gotta do we can never come back.”

Parsons agreed to meet one of the associates to complete the payment on March 6 at her residence.

Instead of the Corvette, she signed over a Ford Ranger truck as a down payment.

Parsons later agreed to find out more informatio­n about the judge.

“At no time did Parsons attempt to notify any authoritie­s of the impending plot to kidnap a sheriff and judge and free Mr. Parsons’ from jail,” the U.S. documents state.

She faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in jail when sentenced on Dec. 1.

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 ?? YOUTUBE ?? Suzanne Holland is in a B.C. jail awaiting trial. She has been linked to an unrelated U.S. kidnapping plot.
YOUTUBE Suzanne Holland is in a B.C. jail awaiting trial. She has been linked to an unrelated U.S. kidnapping plot.

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