Massive Montana Assassination Plot Suspected 

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,46752,00.html
                
AP              
Feb. 15: Flathead County Sheriff Jim Dupont displays some of the weapons
being held as evidence.                 
Thursday, February 28, 2002

KALISPELL, Mont. � A Montana militia group with an arsenal of weapons
planned large-scale assassinations as the first step to an escalating
confrontation they hoped would lead to a war with the federal government,
local authorities said Wednesday. 
"We found weapons, ammunition, survival equipment, booby traps, body
armor, explosive, bomb-making equipment, you name it," Flathead County
Sheriff Jim Dupont said. "It all certainly supports the theory that there
was going to be big trouble. The last I heard, it didn't take 30,000
rounds of ammo to kill a turkey." 
The militia group, Dupont said, hoped to kill enough judges, prosecutors
and law enforcement officers to force the state to call in the National
Guard. The plan was then to kill enough National Guard troops to catch
the federal government's attention, setting off an unchecked escalation. 
"We're pretty sure they were planning on assassinating as many cops and
public officials as possible," he said. 
Dupont said charges were expected, though it was unclear how many people
belong to the organization. He said he planned to meet with federal
prosecutors Friday to determine whether federal conspiracy laws apply. 
The militia group also collected "intelligence files" on the targeted
officials and their families, who included Dupont's own name and those of
a county attorney, police chiefs, district judges, various deputies and
police officers and some of their relatives, the sheriff said. 
"They had these information sheets, actual forms printed out from a
computer," Dupont said. "They had officers' names, addresses, places they
eat, places they shop, stuff about their kids. They even had information
on what medications one guy's wife was taking." 
                
        AP      
        David Burgert   
The group, called Project Seven, was headed by 38-year-old Dave Burgert,
who was arrested earlier this month after an armed standoff that lasted
nearly seven hours, Dupont said. 
Burgert had been awaiting trial on charges he assaulted a police officer
in January 2001. He also faced charges of obstructing a police officer in
a November 2001 incident. 
Burgert faked his own death and disappeared as a judge was ordering him
to be taken off house arrest and placed in jail, Dupont said. He was
nabbed after an informant member of Project Seven led officers to the
home of Tracy Brockway, where Burgert was hiding out. 
Brockway, 32, is charged with obstruction of justice for harboring
Burgert. She also is suspected of using her job as a cleaning woman at
the Whitefish Police Department to gather information about officers and
their families. 
Burgert and Brockway remain jailed. 
Dupont said there is some question "whether this was a wide conspiracy or
just Burgert." 
Mark Potok, editor of the Southern Poverty Law Center's intelligence
report, said that it seemed unlikely Project Seven was a large
organization. 
Instead, Potok said, it seemed more like a case of "classic leaderless
resistance," in which a handful of disgruntled people operate without any
leadership or coordination with a network. 
The center, which compiles information on hate groups and extremist
organizations around the country, has never even heard of Project Seven,
he said. 
"We don't know of any big underground army operating up there, or
anything like that," Potok told FOXNews.com in a telephone interview from
his offices in Montgomery, Ala. "I think the likelihood is very much that
this might not be more than the two people they arrested." 
Dupont said some answers may be on a computer seized at Brockway's house,
with much of the information encrypted, although the woman has provided a
password to decode some of the information. 
The sheriff said the computer files could lead to additional charges
against Burgert, as well as conspiracy charges against at least four
other area residents believed to be members of Project Seven. 
The militia's name refers to license plates in Flathead County, which all
begin with the number seven. A similar cell, called Project 56, is
believed to be operating in adjacent Lincoln County. 
Dupont said the plate-based cells each have about 10 members who are
linked by a "mother cell" that serves as a communications hub. 
The sheriff said his information came from the very reliable informant. 
"Nothing he's told us has not come true," he said. 

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