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Georgia Militia Plot: Feds Arrest Four Suspected Group Members For Alleged Biological Attack Plan

GREG BLUESTEIN   11/ 2/11 08:53 PM ET   AP

GAINESVILLE, Ga. — In the violent underground novel "Absolved," right-wing militia members upset about gun control make war against the U.S. government. This week, federal prosecutors accused four elderly Georgia men of plotting to use the book as a script for a real-life wave of terror and assassination involving explosives and the highly lethal poison ricin.

The four suspected militia members allegedly boasted of a "bucket list" of government officials who needed to be "taken out"; talked about scattering ricin from a plane or a car speeding down a highway past major U.S. cities; and scouted IRS and ATF offices, with one man saying, "We'd have to blow the whole building like Timothy McVeigh."

Federal investigators said they had them under surveillance for at least seven months, infiltrating their meetings at a Waffle House, homes and other places, before finally arresting them Tuesday, just days after discovering evidence they were trying to extract ricin from castor beans.

"While many are focused on the threat posed by international violent extremists, this case demonstrates that we must also remain vigilant in protecting our country from citizens within our own borders who threaten our safety and security," said U.S. Attorney Sally Quillian Yates.

The four gray-haired men – Frederick Thomas, 73; Dan Roberts, 67; Ray Adams, 65; and Samuel Crump, 68 – appeared in federal court Wednesday without entering a plea and were jailed for a bail hearing next week. They apparently had trouble hearing the judge, some of them cupping their ears.

Thomas and Roberts were charged with conspiring to buy an explosive device and an illegal silencer. Prosecutors would not say whether the men actually obtained the items. Adams and Crump were charged with conspiring to make a biological toxin.

Relatives of two of the men said the charges were baseless. The public defender assigned to the case had no comment.

Prosecutors said that Thomas was the ringleader and that he talked of carrying out the sort of actions described in "Absolved," an online novel written by former Alabama militia leader Mike Vanderboegh. In the book, the militia members build rifle grenades and drop explosives from crop dusters.

In the book's introduction, Vanderboegh calls it a "cautionary tale for the out-of-control gun cops of the ATF."

"For that warning to be credible, I must also present what amounts to a combination field manual, technical manual and call to arms for my beloved gunnies of the armed citizenry," he writes. "They need to know how powerful they could truly be if they were pushed into a corner."

In an interview, Vanderboegh said he didn't know the four men and bears no responsibility for the alleged plot.

"I'm glad that the FBI has apparently short-circuited some weak-minded individuals from misinterpreting my novel," he said.

Last year, Vanderboegh was denounced for calling on citizens to throw bricks through the windows of local Democratic headquarters across the country to protest President Barack Obama's health care plan. Several such incidents occurred. Vanderboegh has also appeared as a commentator on Fox News Channel.

Vanderboegh wrote on his blog Wednesday that his book was fiction and that he was skeptical a "pretty geriatric" militia could carry out the attacks the men were accused of planning.

But Kent Alexander, a former U.S. attorney in Atlanta, said he wouldn't write off the men as harmless just because of their age: "Crime doesn't have a retirement age. These guys are older than one usually sees, but criminals come in all ages."

Donnie Dixon, another former U.S. attorney, said: "I would find it extremely difficult to think they could carry out a plot of such grandiose design, which doesn't mean they should not have been nipped in the bud just like they were." He said it would not have required anything grandiose "to cause a lot of problems or hurt a lot of people."

Thomas' wife, Charlotte, told The Associated Press the charges were "baloney."

"He spent 30 years in the U.S. Navy. He would not do anything against his country," she said. "He loves his country."

Roberts' wife, Margaret, said her husband retired from the sign business and lives on a pension. "He's never been in trouble with the law. He's not anti-government," she said. "He would never hurt anybody."

Ricin is a castor-bean extract whose potential as a deadly biological weapon has long been known. In 1978, Bulgarian defector Georgi Markov was assassinated in London with a ricin pellet believed to have been fired from the tip of an umbrella.

Prosecutors wouldn't comment outside court Wednesday on exactly what steps the men took to get their hands on ricin. But they pointed out in court records that the two men allegedly assigned to obtain or make the ricin had useful backgrounds: Adams used to be a lab technician for a U.S. Department of Agriculture agency, and Crump once worked for a contractor who did maintenance at the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Also, Roberts claimed to know a former U.S. soldier who was a "loose cannon" and might be able to help them make ricin, according to court papers.

An informant saw lab equipment and a glass beaker at Adams' home in October, and a bean obtained by the informant tested positive for ricin, prosecutors said.

Thomas is also accused of driving to Atlanta with an informant to case buildings that house the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the IRS and other agencies. During the trip, Thomas allegedly said: "There's two schools of thought on this: Go for the feds or go for the locals. And I'm inclined to consider both. We'd have to blow the whole building like Timothy McVeigh."

Thomas also allegedly boasted of making a "bucket list" of government employees, politicians, businessmen and media members. Court records quoted him as saying: "There is no way for us, as militiamen, to save this country, to save Georgia, without doing something that's highly, highly illegal: Murder."

He also allegedly told an informant: "I could shoot ATF and IRS all day long. All the judges and the DOJ (Department of Justice) and the attorneys and prosecutors."

Court documents accused Crump of suggesting ricin could be dropped from the air or blown out of a car to attack people in Washington; Newark, N.J.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Atlanta and New Orleans.

___

Associated Press writers Dorie Turner, Jeff Martin and Leonard Pallats in Atlanta; Russ Bynum in Savannah, Ga.; and Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Ala., contributed to this story.

___

Follow Bluestein on Twitter at . http://www.twitter.com/bluestein

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GAINESVILLE, Ga. — In the violent underground novel "Absolved," right-wing militia members upset about gun control make war against the U.S. government. This week, federal prosecutors accused fo...
GAINESVILLE, Ga. — In the violent underground novel "Absolved," right-wing militia members upset about gun control make war against the U.S. government. This week, federal prosecutors accused fo...
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12:47 PM on 11/26/2011
Meetings at the Waffle House? That says it all. These creeps need to be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
07:30 AM on 11/04/2011
With the growth of OWS I can't help but wonder if we see more of this with banks, big business and wall street as targets.
11:55 PM on 11/03/2011
Four more rebel flag waving hillbilly rocket scientists. Size 2 hats and 48 inch jumpers.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
InedaName
I voted 3rd party in '08.
10:58 PM on 11/03/2011
For the movie I'm seeing Clint Eastwood, Lee Ermey, Robert Duvall, and maybe DeNiro.
01:18 AM on 11/04/2011
If Clint directs, one of the guys will be played by Morgan Freeman somehow.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
InedaName
I voted 3rd party in '08.
03:37 PM on 11/04/2011
Badges must not be working today. I'd award you with a LOL!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mivogo
Single standard truth and democracy
10:56 PM on 11/03/2011
This fascist was a commentator on Fox News? Advocating throwing bricks through the windows of candidates??
06:38 PM on 11/03/2011
I feel so safe now and if this is the FBIs work its a laugh. First that kind of poison would never work that way. This is really dumb stuff.
10:42 PM on 11/03/2011
Ricin can made into a powder or a mist. Would you want to be standing on a corner, as a cloud of dust hit your face coming from a moving car? I don't feel any safer, but then again I don't live in GA. where these domestic terrorists live, and were planning their attack.
03:58 PM on 11/03/2011
,the bomb the government made that blew up in the basement of the wtc in 1993 ,that the government and the da knew about prior and did nothing to try and stop
03:58 PM on 11/03/2011
yeah lets believe the corrupt government and the HP who doesnt even know how to spell bologna
gimmie a break, how many time are people going to fall for this crap ,its the same as the xmas day underwear bomber mutalab ,who was seen being led pat security and led on the plane by a guy ina suit that was believed to be a government agent/handler by a passenger who was a lawyer and his wife, all this happened the week before the body scanners were to go in, scanners made by a company owned by michael chertoff ,can you say conflict of interest, like the so called x-mas tree bomber the following year in seattle ,that the media tries to spin and report like it was all his idea and that he was acting alone, but in reality it was the government that built the bomb and suggested the target and had that date in mind and were grooming and planning for months in advance to make it more sensational ,then the media all but covers up the fact that it was a sting,the same way they covered up the fact the wtc bombing in 93 was a sting after it came out years later and there is now proof in the form of a tape that the government informant taped his handler insisting that the bomb be made of real explosives
01:05 PM on 11/03/2011
"He spent 30 years in the U.S. Navy. He would not do anything against his country," she said. "He loves his country."

Yeah...people have done some pretty awful things in their country's name. Wake up, lady. Your husband's a terrorist.
01:03 PM on 11/03/2011
LOL, is this story for real. These guys are just shy of memory loss and would need a nap before they could carry anything out. I just saw a story just like this one but it was blaming someone else for their actions because he wrote about it. The media you just got to love them. When I read a story I just think of my favorite show "just shoot me" also about writers and there lack of ability and keen way of putting things to make them intresting.
12:40 PM on 11/03/2011
A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious.
But it cannot survive treason from within.
An enemy at the gates is less formidable,
for he is known and carries his banner openly.
But the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys,
heard in the very halls of government itself.
For the traitor appears not a traitor;
he speaks in accents familiar to his victims,
and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men.
He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city,
he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist.
A murderer is less to fear.
The traitor is the plague

— Marcus Tullius Cicero
02:27 PM on 11/03/2011
you do know the context of this speech, right? he was speaking in the Senate against the Catiline conspiracy. Many historians are arguing that there was no Catiline conspiracy, in reality, but that it was a fabrication to allow Cicero to bypass the scheduled election, and keep his office as Consul. Cicero, while a supporter of the Republic was not the person he's been believed to be. Especially since most of what's known about Cicero is known from primary sources written by one Marcus Tullius Cicero. A champion of justice who bragged of throwing dust in the judges' eyes.
08:07 AM on 11/05/2011
The context does not change the truth of the content.
11:56 AM on 11/03/2011
Probably not what everyone else is talking about with this story, but it always bothers me when I see a book, movie, video game, etc., labeled as violent. Did the book go out & shoot someone in the face? No? Oh, you just mean it depicts & describes violence? Depicting or describing violence is a very different thing from being violent. It's analogous to believing all speech should be free being a very different thing from supporting what every person uses their free speech to say, or even from supporting every person that chooses to speak out. I hate what Westboro Church members have to say, but as long as they are on their own or public property, they have the right to say it, and I have the right to disagree and even to avoid them or go out of my way to not do business with their members. (Not like I do a lot of business in Topeka Kansas anyway, but just saying.) Unless the book has a volition & attacks people, it's not violent.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FiredUpRTG
Don't start no stuff; won't be no stuff…
11:53 AM on 11/03/2011
Teal i ban.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FiredUpRTG
Don't start no stuff; won't be no stuff…
11:37 AM on 11/03/2011
Lights are dim in GA. The dim lights also blame the gov and big cities for their inadequate power.
02:29 PM on 11/03/2011
And the lack of construction permits for any supplemental power generation would be whose fault, exactly?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FiredUpRTG
Don't start no stuff; won't be no stuff…
03:00 PM on 11/03/2011
I wasn't talking about dim watts; I was speaking of wits. but literally did the Rep governor of GA reject stimulus $$ in the past 2 years?
11:15 AM on 11/03/2011
More fearmongering. How much is this costing the US taxpayer? Wow! We really don't want to know the answer to that question, now do we?