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Subject: U.S. Marshals arrest tax protesters Ed and Elaine Brown
Date: Fri, 05 Oct 2007 08:44:36 -0600
Tax evaders in custody, marshal says
Ed and Elaine Brown taken without trouble
http://tinyurl.com/ytejp9
By Margot Sanger-Katz
Monitor staff
October 05. 2007
U.S. Marshals arrested tax protesters Ed and Elaine Brown at their
Plainfield home yesterday, ending the couple's eight-month standoff
without bloodshed. The Browns vowed never to be taken alive, but
U.S. Marshal Stephen Monier said yesterday that both Browns were
arrested without incident on their property around 7:45 p.m.
"The Browns may now begin serving their 63-month federal prison
terms," Monier said in a written statement last night. A
representative for the marshals refused to answer any questions
about the arrests last night.
"High-profile situations like this are always difficult, but
they don't have to be tragic. I'm glad no one was injured, and that
the community remained safe throughout the operation," Monier
said.
Marshals will hold a press briefing this morning to provide details
about the arrests. According to the statement, the Browns have
already been turned over to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons to begin
serving their sentences.
The Browns were convicted of a series of tax-related crimes in
January and had both been sentenced in absentia to 63 months in
prison. But they have avoided capture, remaining holed up in their
solar powered concrete home for months, where they have made
repeated public threats of violence and have entertained a large and
rotating cast of supporters.
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A jury found that the couple had conspired to hide the nearly $2
million that Elaine Brown earned as a dentist over nearly a decade,
but the couple maintained that no law compelled them to pay federal
income taxes. They described their lengthy standoff as a stand
against an unjust court system that was keeping the truth about the
tax system from most Americans.
The couple defended themselves at trial, promising to show jurors
not only their innocence, but the truth of their legal views. When
the judge showed them a copy of jury instructions in their case that
they said ensured they could not get a fair trial, they stopped
attending the proceedings.
Elaine Brown ultimately returned to court, but Ed Brown sent an
e-mail to his friends warning that the situation was likely to turn
into "another Waco."
Last night, word of the Browns' arrests began to spread on blogs and
message boards where supporters communicate. In a message posted to
Ed and Elaine's MySpace page, Jim Hobbs of Phoenix, who lived with
the couple for several weeks this summer, wrote: "This site
shows 5116 friends. How many of you are just going to sit back and
do nothing and how many of you will take action. ed had a list of 50
most wanted. Will you act on that list and send the messsage, Loud
and clear."
Marshals did not release any details about the Browns' capture or
any additional charges they may face, but in a recent press
briefing, Monier suggested that marshals were investigating the
couple for new crimes related to their standoff.
"This was a tax case," he said in September, "but
over the last seven months, the Browns have allegedly obstructed
justice and encouraged others to assist them. Ed Brown has
threatened to kill law enforcement officers and other government
officials."
The Browns were active in the militia movement in the 1990s,
training in a group called the Constitution Defense Militia. Ed
Brown became a prominent spokesman for the movement after the
Oklahoma City bombing, when he told national news organizations that
the attack had been planned by federal agents to discredit the
movement.
In recent years, he has served as the national head of the
Constitution Rangers of the Continental Congress of 1776, an
organization charged with holding law enforcement figures
accountable to the constitution.
News of Ed Brown's stand quickly spread through the militia
community and flowed to other groups as well. His case captured the
imagination of many who believed the income tax system was
illegitimate or felt the federal government had gone too far in
interfering with individual liberties. The case also attracted the
support of members of the local Free State Project, a group of New
Hampshire libertarians hoping to transform the state's politics.
As Elaine Brown returned to court to complete her defense,
supporters brought food, weapons and flags to the Brown home, which
the couple had improved over several years. Their large home is
fitted with solar panels, a woodstove and well, and was designed to
function "off the grid." Ed Brown described the walls as
built of 10-inch thick concrete for structural support, and a
five-story watchtower afforded a 360 degree view of the hilltop
property. At their bail hearing last May, the prosecutor described
the improved home as "essentially a fortress."
Elaine Brown was freed on bail following her conviction, but fled to
join her husband in late February. The couple have remained together
ever since, and have both expressed their desire to die in support
of their cause. Elaine Brown said that she could imagine only two
ways they would leave the property, "either as a free man and
as a free woman or in body bags."
Marshals have done little to block access to the couple's home, and
the Browns have been visited by a number of local and out-of-state
supporters. According to accounts from the Browns and the supporters
themselves, they brought the couple food, cell phones and weapons,
and helped them establish a presence on the internet that allowed
them to communicate with like minded people elsewhere in the
country. Since February, the couple has appeared nearly every
weekday on an online radio show, where they have discussed their
political beliefs and made several threats against federal officials
As recently as yesterday, the couple used the show to discuss the
possible utility of organizing assassination squads to target key
government figures.
"That's what's going to have to happen worldwide," Ed
Brown said.
The Browns have recently made mention of a list of targets being
prepared in case they are harmed by authorities.
Marshals arrested four of the couple's most prominent helpers last
month, charging them with federal felonies for helping the couple.
All four are being held without bail until their trials, scheduled
for November. Among other things, three of the supporters were
charged with bringing the couple .50 caliber rifles, which shoot
bullets capable of piercing body armor and are able to hit targets
at long distances with great accuracy.
A fifth supporter was arrested this week by local authorities and is
being held on bond for a number of driving-related offenses.
Visits to the property have quieted since the arrests, Elaine Brown
said on the radio show yesterday.
"Locals don't come so much anymore," she said. "I
guess the feds scared them off."
Monier did not say if quiet conditions at the property led to the
timing of arrests, but his statement did say that he believed their
arrests last night "promised the safest possible outcome."
The statement did not say whether the Browns were entertaining
guests at the time of their arrest.
In June, marshals surrounded the Browns' home with state police SWAT
teams, bringing helicopters, paramedics and an explosives disposal
unit, but Monier denied that they were there to arrest the couple.
Instead, he said marshals were performing surveillance on the couple
while authorities seized the couple's commercial building 10 miles
away. Marshals briefly detained and interrogated a Brown supporter
who stumbled on a surveillance team that morning while walking the
couple's dog.
But other than that incident, Monier has taken a low-key approach to
the Brown case. He has frequently warned supporters that they are
subject to prosecution for helping the couple, but marshals have
rarely been visible near the house, and their communications with
the couple were focused on persuading them to surrender, he said.
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