Thursday, May 6, 2010

UPDATED:

DETROIT (AP) — A federal appeals court on Thursday issued an emergency stay blocking, at least temporarily, the release of nine jailed Michigan militia members accused of conspiring to overthrow the U.S. government.

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati issued the stay shortly after U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade filed a motion seeking the order. Defense attorneys have until 5 p.m. to respond.

The nine were returned to U.S. District Court in Detroit on Thursday to be processed for release, but the appeals court halted those proceedings.

“It’s frustrating, to be sure,” said Michael Rataj, attorney for Tina Stone, 44, the wife of militia leader David Stone, also 44. “She’s disappointed. She thought she was going home.”

In a ruling late Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Victoria Roberts said she would not suspend further her Monday order that releases the militia members with strict rules, including electronic monitoring and curfews.

“We don’t think the conditions are satisfactory,” Ms. McQuade said. “We think the defendants pose a danger to the public and to law enforcement in particular. It’s my duty to protect the safety of the public.”

Judge Roberts on Monday ordered the militia members released but then suspended her ruling while prosecutors decided whether to appeal. They will appeal, but she was not persuaded to freeze the order any longer.

Advertisement
Advertisement

“Defendants are presumed innocent of all charges against them… . This presumption of innocence is part and parcel of why, ’In our society liberty is the norm, and detention prior to trial or without trial is the carefully limited exception,’” Judge Roberts wrote, quoting a 1987 U.S. Supreme Court decision.

The members of the southern Michigan militia, called Hutaree, are charged with conspiracy to commit sedition, or rebellion, against the government and the attempted use of weapons of mass destruction. They have been in custody without bond since late March.

Authorities, citing secretly recorded conversations, say the group planned to kill a police officer and bomb the subsequent funeral. Defense attorneys say it was nothing more than hateful talk.

Prosecutors claim the suspects are too dangerous to be released from jail, but Judge Roberts has set many restrictions and appointed third-party custodians, mostly family members, to keep watch.

An undercover agent infiltrated the group and secretly recorded some members talking about killing police and fearing a “New World Order.”

Advertisement
Advertisement

Earlier this week, Judge Roberts said it was “offensive and hate-filled speech” but it did not signal a conspiracy to levy war against the government.

William Swor, lawyer for Mr. Stone, of Clayton, Mich., said he was delighted to see the judge’s decision Wednesday night.

“We think it’s another step toward vindication, but we have no delusion that this is over,” Mr. Swor said.

Since a series of raids and arrests, Hutaree members have been portrayed by the government as homegrown extremists out to strike at authorities, but evidence offered during the detention hearing pointed to no specific plot.

Advertisement
Advertisement

“The government’s position that the defendants sought to acquire explosive devices is weakened by the evidence that the agents found no explosive devices when defendants were arrested,” the judge said.

Judge Roberts acknowledged she did not consider the “stockpiles” of legal firearms and ammunition possessed by militia members, but she noted there was no corroboration that the weapons were tied to any scheme to overthrow the government.

Copyright © 2026 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.