-Caveat Lector-

McVeigh factor destroys militias

<http://www.azcentral.com/news/0506militia06.html>

Mark Shaffer
The Arizona Republic
May. 6, 2001

Eric Frizzell fondly remembers the heady days of the Yavapai Militia.
More than 100 people from Black Canyon City to Chino Valley would gather
twice a month to watch high-tech doomsday videos or grainy, black and white
video of the Bataan Death March.
They would create a stir among sheriff's dispatchers in Prescott by
launching war games.
They reveled in new weapons and old war stories.
Heck, Frizzell said, he even rose to the rank of general in one militia
group he was affiliated with in Florida. Outrage flared after Randy
Weaver's wife and son were shot to death by government agents at Ruby Ridge
in Idaho and David Koresh's flock was incinerated near Waco, Texas.
Then, Timothy McVeigh, who had once visited Prescott seeking guidance in
forming a militia in the Kingman area, bombed the Alfred P.  Murrah Federal
Building in Oklahoma City in 1995. A year later, federal agents busted 12
members of a Valley militia group, the Vipers, on conspiracy, weapons and
explosives charges.
"The whole militia movement in this state just basically disintegrated into
chaos after that," said Frizzell, a Cordes Junction telemarketer.  "Most
people just got out, and the rest went so far underground that they haven't
been heard from since."
Which has pretty much been the story of militias nationwide. McVeigh's
desire to be the Lexington of the next American Revolution has instead led
to the demise of the movement, those who study militias say.
But that's not the only reason.
The Republic of Texas and Montana Freemen movements were brought to their
knees after numerous arrests and long prison sentences for their
leadership. A lawsuit effectively ended Richard Butler's Aryan Nation
White-supremacist group in Idaho when it was bankrupted by a civil rights
lawsuit after security guards attacked two passers-by.
Cas Mudde, an expert on international right-wing movements and a political
science professor at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, said the
worst fallout for U.S. militias is that they were abandoned by "sizable
moderate elements" in the aftermath of Oklahoma City and the other recent
problems.
"The militia movement lost its fairly good reputation," Mudde said.  "There
is little chance it will regain it, either, as Oklahoma stands out as a
defining event in recent U.S. history and anything related to the militia
movement will inevitably be linked to Oklahoma and McVeigh."
According to the Southern Poverty Law Center of Montgomery, Ala., which
monitors the country's hate groups, the number of militia Web sites
decreased by 50 percent in 1999 and many of those that remained had not
been updated in years. The law center, which documented 27 militia groups
in Arizona in 1996, now says only five remain.
Donald "Mac" MacPherson, a Valley attorney who has represented tax
protesters and militia members in the past, says that even acknowledging
five militias in Arizona is overstating the situation.
"It's all quiet on the Western front. I haven't heard of any active militia
groups in Arizona," MacPherson said. Once-influential militia leaders in
Arizona and Nevada such as former Phoenix policeman Jack McLamb, former
Vietnam Green Beret Bo Gritz and former Arizona legislator Jerry Gillespie
have all left the area for Idaho, he said.
"By the same token, tax-protest and gun-advocacy efforts have never been
stronger, and those are close cousins to militia activity," McPherson said.
But the militias are in a world of hurt.
Even the Northern Michigan Regional Militia, which with 1,000 members
claimed to be one of the nation's largest and which received widespread
publicity after the Oklahoma City bombing, announced last month that it was
disbanding because of lack of interest.
Al Shearer, a hate-crimes investigator for the Maricopa County Attorney's
Office, said he saw a large slowdown in militia activity after the Oklahoma
City bombing.
"It seemed like a lot of people were embarrassed to align themselves with
militias after that," Shearer said. "And now, when you look at militia
message boards on the Internet, it seems like everything is just kind of
fat, dumb and happy. I saw one posting the other day wondering about the
availability of lime for latrines. Then, there's always Aryan maidens
looking for (relationships with) Aryan warriors."
All of which shows that events like Waco and Ruby Ridge are quickly fading
from memory, Shearer said.
"When you combine that with no big talk lately about gun control, that
pretty much does it for issues. The primary concern there is the fear of
losing firearms," Shearer said.
Or, an economy turned sour, said Bill Strauss, regional director of the
Anti-Defamation League in Phoenix.
"A bad economic situation always breeds some ugly mind-sets," Strauss said.
"But as it stands now, what militia activity that remains is primarily in
the Midwest with just a few pockets here in the Southwest."
Strauss said investigators for the league also saw more evidence of militia
stress during a gun show at the state fairgrounds last month: The Militia
of Montana passed out materials in attempts to recruit members in Arizona.
"I guess when the mission is to battle it out with the federal government,
it's not too popular of a cause," Strauss said.
There also have been infighting problems, said Stephen Gehring, a Payson
paralegal and former militia member.
"Much of the decline of the militia movement can be attributed to the
mixing of religious beliefs and law. Now, they've created this big fruit
salad, and they're all just a bunch of nuts," he said.
Gehring said that he has seen the dark side of assisting radical,
anti-government groups. He said he was asked to help the Montana Freemen
set up a legal basis for establishing a new currency, shortly before they
faced an extended siege by federal agents.
"The more I studied and wrote about this, the more my findings proved that
they were wrong, and it made them angry," Gehring said.
Shortly after returning to Payson, Gehring said he lost $150,000 worth of
possessions when a fire started by a "two-stage device at 3:30 in the
morning" destroyed his home and legal-research library. No arrests were
made in the arson case, Gehring said.
But Frizzell, the former militia commander, said the last thing he would
expect is any more significant violence from the right.
"They've buried themselves," Frizzell said. "I recently got some mail from
the Montana Militia. I felt like writing them back and telling them to grow
up."
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Reach the reporter at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or (602)444-8057.

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