The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Murder plot

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everyone in the courtroom, including Superior Court Judge John Niedrach, also wore masks. All three alleged conspirato­rs are being held without bond, and because of the continuing COVID19 crisis, none have been indicted because grand juries are not meeting. Last month, the men asked Niedrach to reconsider granting them bond because of the pandemic, but he refused.

At the end of Friday’s twohour hearing, Niedrach ruled the state has establishe­d probable cause. He said he would consider a bail motion for Kaderli, but noted he already had twice refused to release him.

Witness challenged

The only witness called during Friday’s hearing was Floyd County police Sgt. Matt Meyers, who recounted the case against the men by reading aloud from a 20-page affidavit. Meyers described himself as the “case agent” for the investigat­ion, but the affidavit was based on informatio­n collected by the undercover officer and other state and federal agents who assisted in the investigat­ion.

Defense attorneys for Kaderli and Helterbran­d pounced on details in the affidavit, challengin­g Meyers’ memory of various details of the investigat­ion, while distancing their clients from the alleged plot. When Meyers testified the group met between 10 and 12 times to plan the alleged killing, Lovell pressed him for an exact figure.

“I don’t remember exactly how many meeting there were,” Meyers said. “That was a guess off the top of my head.”

Lovell also asked who wrote the affidavit.

“The FBI assisted with preparing it,” Meyers said. “I don’t know who exactly prepared it.”

“Did they email it to you?” Lovell asked.

Meyers said yes, but he said he wrote portions of the document as well.

Taped phone conversati­ons

Radford Bunker, attorney for Helterbran­d, challenged Meyers on a statement his client was “big into the bowl patrol stuff,” a reference to the hairstyle of white supremacis­t Dylann Roof, the mass murderer convicted of killing nine members of an African American church in Charleston in 2015. Bunker pointed out the affidavit said Lane told the undercover officer that, not his client.

“There was a whole lot said and we are several months out from that. I don’t remember what was said,” Meyer said.

Assistant District Attorney Emily Johnson told the judge Kaderli and Helterbran­d were active conspirato­rs in the murder plot and pointed to other portions of the lengthy affidavit where the undercover agent directly quoted them or described their actions.

In one exchange, the agents said Luke brought up plans for the murder.

“The Cartersvil­le guy?” Kaderli alleged replied. “Alright, when is that happening.”

Johnson also pointed to alleged statements by Helterbran­d that he had no problem killing any children they found in the home and promising to bring drugs, including methamphet­amines, the night of the alleged attack.

Johnson asked the judge to again deny bond and said authoritie­s had a taped phone conversati­on from Kaderli where he said he would “disappear” if released. The state did not produce the recording at the hearing.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? John Lovell, attorney for Jacob Kaderli, speaks before Judge John Niedrach during a preliminar­y hearing for Michael Helterbran­d and Kaderli at Floyd County Superior Court in Rome on Friday.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM John Lovell, attorney for Jacob Kaderli, speaks before Judge John Niedrach during a preliminar­y hearing for Michael Helterbran­d and Kaderli at Floyd County Superior Court in Rome on Friday.
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