FBI agent: Groups discussed kidnapping Virginia governor
Members of anti-government paramilitary groups discussed
kidnapping Virginia’s governor during a June meeting in Ohio, an FBI agent
testified Tuesday during a court hearing in Michigan.
Special Agent Richard Trask was part of the investigation
that led to six men being arrested and charged last week with plotting to
kidnap Michigan’s Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. Seven other men face state
terrorism charges.
Trask did not name Virginia’s Democratic governor, Ralph
Northam, during his testimony in a federal courtroom in Grand Rapids. He said
members of anti-government groups from multiple states attended the meeting.
“They discussed possible targets, taking a sitting governor,
specifically issues with the governor of Michigan and Virginia based on the
lockdown orders,” Trask said. He said the people at the meeting were unhappy
with the governors’ response to the coronavirus pandemic.
Trask did not discuss further planning aimed at Northam.
The FBI did not brief Northam on any potential threat,
according to a state official with knowledge of the governor’s briefings who
was not authorized to speak publicly.
The June meeting was part of the FBI’s investigation of
various anti-government groups, leading to last week’s stunning announcement
that six men had been arrested for an alleged plot to kidnap Whitmer.
Tuesday’s court hearing was to review investigators’
evidence against Adam Fox, Ty Garbin, Kaleb Franks, Daniel Harris and Brandon
Caserta and whether they should be detained before trial. The men are all
Michigan residents.
A sixth man, Barry Croft, was being held in Delaware.
The FBI used confidential sources, undercover agents and
clandestine recordings to foil the alleged kidnapping conspiracy. Some
defendants had conducted coordinated surveillance of the Democratic governor’s
vacation home in northern Michigan in August and September, according to a
criminal complaint.
The men were trying to retaliate against Whitmer due to her
“uncontrolled power” amid the coronavirus pandemic, authorities said. They said
four of the men had planned to meet last week to pay for explosives and
exchange tactical gear.
Whitmer, who was considered as Joe Biden’s running mate and
is nearly halfway through a four-year term, has been widely praised for her
response to the virus outbreak but also sharply criticized by Republican
lawmakers and people in conservative areas of the state. The Capitol has been
the site of many rallies, including ones with gun-toting protesters calling for
her ouster.
Whitmer put major restrictions on personal movement and the
economy, although many of those limits have been lifted since spring.
Fox, who was described as one of the leaders, was living in
the basement of a vacuum shop in Grand Rapids. The owner said Fox was opposed
to wearing a mask during the pandemic and kept firearms and ammunition at the
store.
The defendants face up to life in prison if convicted.
Seven others linked to a paramilitary group called the
Wolverine Watchmen were charged in state court for allegedly seeking to storm
the Michigan Capitol and providing material support for terrorist acts by
seeking a “civil war.”
The investigation is ongoing.



