Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: MONDAY, October 10, 1994 TAG: 9410110047 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A-1 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: JOHN FLESHER ASSOCIATED PRESS DATELINE: PETOSKEY, MICH. LENGTH: Long
For members of the Northern Michigan Regional Militia, the signs are everywhere.
They have reports of helicopters hovering over houses; stickers on the backs of highway signs with indecipherable codes that just might be messages for foreign troops; U.N. military vehicles spotted in Western states.
Maybe it's all harmless, they say. But maybe not - maybe the tentacles of a foreign-dominated police state are already spreading throughout the continent.
The militiamen are taking no chances. They and other hard-core gun activists around the nation are organizing, planning, training for the day when their guns will be weapons of war.
``We're not here playing soldier, we're not foolishly looking for trouble. ... But tyrants should know that they will be met with force,'' says Norm Olson, commander of the Northern Michigan militia.
It's unclear how many self-styled militias exist nationwide. The FBI keeps no list and would monitor them only if they were suspected of violating federal law or planning to do so, an agency spokesman says.
But mainstream groups on both sides of the gun-control debate agree that the militia movement is for real.
``In some cases, they're setting up what I'd call legitimate groups to lobby and pressure local governments,'' said Alan Gottlieb, chairman of the Citizens' Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms.
``But you're also seeing the more extreme elements ... who feel the only way to take back the government is through armed resistance.''
The militias, says Ray Southwell of the Northern Michigan group, are led by spiritual heirs of the Revolutionary-era citizens who took up arms against British tyranny. Only now, he says, the U.S. government is the tyrant.
His evidence: the crime bill, which bans some assault-type weapons; the Brady Law's national waiting period for handgun purchases; the ``murder'' of David Koresh and his Branch Davidian followers in Texas, said to be proof that the government will do anything to take guns from civilians.
Some see gun control as part of a broader conspiracy to bring about world government. If that day comes, they say, Americans will be ruled by a socialist United Nations, which will abolish freedom of religion and speech. Foreign troops will occupy U.S. soil, confiscating private weapons and property.
``Am I nuts? Am I paranoid? Maybe, but I'm seeing things that scare me and I want to find out what's going on,'' Southwell says.
He's not alone. Randy Trochman of Noxon, Mont., believes in the world-dictatorship conspiracy. He is a member of the Militia of Montana, which has been forming local chapters since February and is assisting similar efforts in Idaho and Washington state.
``Our objective is to get organizations similar to ours in every county in the country,'' he said. ``People are getting together to defend themselves.''
In Florida, the militia movement is picking up ``like a snowball rolling down a mountain,'' said Robert Pummer, a member from Stuart.
This summer, commissioners in four Panhandle counties authorized citizens to form militias. Commissioners said their resolutions were symbolic messages to Washington to get off gun owners' backs.
Northern Michigan's ``First Brigade'' formed last April and has inspired spinoff groups in 11 counties, Southwell says.
The First Brigade meets once a month. Olson, the commander, owns a gun shop in Alanson. He's also pastor of the Calvary Baptist Church.
During assemblies, First Brigade members (65, at a recent meeting) discuss ways to mount guerrilla resistance, if necessary. They have ``field exercises'' such as fire building and compass reading.
Members take an oath to defend the Constitution against enemies ``foreign and domestic.'' Their conduct code demands a willingness to die for their liberty and a promise never to surrender or divulge information about the militia if taken ``prisoner of war.''
To outsiders, this might seem the stuff of a B-grade movie farce: gun-toting men in military fatigues, some with faces blackened for combat, preparing for doomsday in rural northern Michigan.
But it's no joke to Mary Hessel, mayor of Pellston, population 580. She feuded with the militia this summer because members were bringing unloaded rifles to meetings in local parks.
``We don't need this kind of thing. We're just a quiet, peaceful little community,'' Hessel said. ``I had one person ask me, `What's next, the KKK? The neo-Nazis?'''
The militiamen say the nation's founders believed citizens should arm themselves to keep government in line. They cite the Second Amendment reference to a ``well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state.''
And they say laws in Michigan and many states sanction an ``organized militia'' - the National Guard and other professional forces - and an ``unorganized militia,'' consisting of able-bodied civilians.
Dennis Henigan, general counsel for Washington, D.C.-based Handgun Control Inc., says people charged with firearms law violations sometimes claim membership in the so-called unorganized militia. But courts have ruled the ``militia'' in the Second Amendment means an arm of state government, he says.
``What seems to be going on in Michigan is formation of something akin to a private army,'' Henigan said. ``It would be profoundly threatening to our constitutional system if people thought they had a right to start shooting if they felt government was becoming oppressive.''
by CNB