They all ordinary, but harbored an obsession with guns - and possibly
terror. The Feds may have busted them just in time.
Item one in the U.S. Government's case against "Team Viper"
is a short videotape that was partly shot on the weekend on Nov.
11-12, 1995. The location was an isolated area in Tonto National
Forest, about 60 miles northeast of Phoenix, Ariz., and the cameraman-director
was Finis Howard (Rick) Walker, 41, a furniture broker who at
the time was captain of the militia group. The event was a "B-shoot,"
Viper code for a field exercise that was closed to outsiders,
and the mission was to test-fire a variety of home-made explosives.
There were little bombs and big bombs, and everyone had a great
time. "Yes!Yes! That felt good!" someone exclaimed
as a small bomb went off. Another sequence showed two men wearing
camouflage fatigues carrying a large drum. "This is the
biggest firecracker we've ever made," one man said enthusiastically.
Then came the explosion and a giant pillar of smoke. "Wow!Wow!
It's a f-king mushroom cloud!" somebody yelped.
There are seemingly ordinary Americans having what they consider
to be fun - which is why the videotape and the peculiar form
of recreation it depicts are ultimately so chilling. As nearly
as one can tell from the evidence now being presented in federal
court, the members of Team Viper appear to be fairly typical Phoenix
suburbanites who played guerrilla games in their spare time -
and may have considered much, much worse. They live on streets
like Shangri-La Road and West Glendale Avenue; some have kids,
and most hold 9-5 jobs. They are neither drifters nor dropouts
- not hermits, not commune-dwellers, not religious cultists.
How this particular mix of people came so close to the edge of
terrorist violence is a mystery for now. But united by their
passion for things that Go Boom, they appear to have convinced
themselves that their right to have convinced themselves that
their right to bear arms was in jeopardy and that the Feds were
out to get them.
It turns out that the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
fearing that the Vipers were planning violence, was already on
their trail. Responding to a complaint from a hunter who encountered
a Viper patrol during the group's November demolitions spree,
ATF agents mounted an investigation that involved an undercover
infiltrator. The infiltrator was a state game warden who called
himself Scott Wells. "Wells" posed as a neo-Nazi and
was accepted by the group - but not before he had sworn to kill,
if necessary, and not before he survived a secret background
check. The data for this check came from phone records obtained
by Ellen Adella Belliveau, 27, a Viper member who works for AT&T.
Just how Wells passed the background check remains a secret,
but prosecutors cited what seemed to be undercover evidence during
a bail hearing last week. Among these details was the allegation
that Bellivieau proposed targeting the families of federal agents
if members of the group were busted. Nobody seconded her motion.
Although all have pleaded not guilty, a federal grand jury indicted
12 Vipers on weapons charges and six of the group for allegedly
conspiring to "furnish instruction in the use of explosive
devices
in furtherance of civil disorder."
Part of the evidence for this conspiracy charge is another videotape
that reportedly depicts Viper members narrating a tour of downtown
Phoenix. The goal was to identify building housing various federal
agencies, such as the FBI, ATF and the Secret Service, and show
how to blow them up. The tape was made in May 1994, nearly a
year before the Oklahoma City bombing. Dean Carl Pleasant, 27,
is one of the narrators. A former doughnut maker, sometimes college
student and losing candidate for the Arizona state Senate on the
Libertarian ticket, Pleasant and the others point out the buildings'
vulnerabilities and calmly discuss how easy it would be to "collapse"
them using explosive charges. This may have been mere fantasy.
His opponent in the state Senate race, Republican John Kaites,
said Pleasant was "a bit immature," a guy who had never
"grown out of the GI Joe phase." But what to make of
the fact that ATF agents recovered 300 to 400 pounds of ammonium
nitrate and a 55-gallon drum of nitromethane - the makings of
an Oklahoma City-style bomb - from the home of Viper Gary Bauer?
You can argue, as some do, that Walker, Pleasant and the other
Vipers are Walter Mitty types with a goofy taste for war games.
"These people are not terrorists," says Rick Sherrow
of Soldier of Fortune magazine. "they're not angels, but
they're not terrorists. They're just dumb." Or you can
argue, like Alan Trabilcy, owner of a Phoenix gun store, that
the Vipers are "nice people" who just happen to own
something in excess of 140 guns. "It's not that surprising."
Tracible says. "Out West, people have 50 to 100 guns apiece."
And you can argue, like militia spokesman Mike Johnson, that
Pleasant was merely exercising he constitutional right to carry
out a "reconnaissance mission" in case the U.S. government
betrays its citizens by trying to take away their guns. "I've
seen and met everyone who was arrested," says one of Pleasant's
friends. "As far as I was concerned, they were all just
taking classes."
But, this man adds, "a lot of people see us heading toward
major civil unrest. It's not just this town - people are fed
up with government taking more and more control of our lives."
So if guns are your consuming passion, how paranoid can you get?
Consider a document that may have some bearing on the Phoenix
case. It is called "OPLAN American Viper" and is available
from a Del City, Okla., group called United Sovereigns of America.
("OPLAN" is spook talk for an operations plan; the
name Viper refers to the Revolutionary war battle flag showing
a snake with the slogan DON'T TREAD ON ME.) OPLAN Viper is full
of paranoid ramblings about the New World Order and a plot, supposedly
including U.S. officials, to allow Russian and east German troops
to take over America.
The message is to prepare for Guerrilla war - war against the
invaders and against treasonous Americans as well. The tract
recommends sniper teams, assassination and large-scale sabotage,
including the "contamination of enemy food sources and water
supplies" using ordinary household chemicals such as rat
poison, drain cleaners and battery acid. OPLAN helpfully notes
that "many books" are available to advise the reader
on making explosives, and it suggests that "unguarded rail
lines" are "soft targets" for the guerrilla-patriot.
This is interesting because somebody derailed a passenger train
west of Phoenix last fall and left a militia-style flyer on the
scene. Although no one knows whether the suspects ever read the
OPLAN, the FBI is looking for links between the Vipers and the
derailment.
The ATF, meanwhile, clearly thought the Vipers posed a significant
terrorist threat. Part of the reason is the sheer number of weapons
seized - more than 140 rifles and pistols in all, 95 of which
came from the home of Gary Bauer. Some of these guns were obsolete
military weapons like the Browning .30-caliber machine gun that
Viper Capt. Randy Lynne Nelson took to bed every night (he called
it "Shirley"). Others were modern assault rifles, of
which had been illegally converted to full-automatic fire, and
at least a few had their serial numbers filed off. There were
hand grenades, rocket launchers, gas masks, bulletproof vest,
silences and thousands of rounds of ammunition. There were two
live homemade bombs as well, which were allegedly found in Bauer's
home and detinated by the Phoenix bomb squad. Bauer, 50, is an
engineer, a Vietnam veteran and the Viper munitions expert. A
neighbor said she often saw men with guns at this house. "I
told my husband there are a lot of guns in that house, but that
I didn't know what they were up to," she said. "He
told me it was none of our business."
But the real reason for the government's concern was that Viper
leaders, according to ATF investigators and many in the militia
movement, had a history of talking dangerously tough. The group
was expelled from the Militia of Arizona six months ago because
Rick Walker was feuding with those who, in the wake of the Oklahoma
City bombing, were trying to improve the movement's image. Nelson
and Pleasant were kicked out of a shooting competition sponsored
by Soldier of Fortune magazine, and Nelson the used the group's
newsletter to warn the competition's organizer that he was going
to "smash your face." Pleasant stunned his opponent
in the state Senate race by putting out a gun in a restaurant,
and ATF Special Agent Steve Ott testified that Bauer boasted during
a recent Viper meeting that he had "once had a law-enforcement
officer in his cross hairs and was preparing to shoot if he gave
him trouble." Most ominous of all was the report that someone
in the group got a list of ATF agents off the Internet. That
suggested that the Vipers might be ready to act out their violent
fantasies.
It will be up to a jury to decide whether they posed a real threat
or not. ATF has not claimed that the Vipers had a specific plot
in mind, which could make the conspiracy counts hard to prosecute.
But given the Vipers' wild talk and vast arsenal, the Feds had
no real choice but to move sooner rather than later.
[IN the cross hairs - The dozen members of the Viper Militia
allegedly planned to blow up - Oklahoma City style - seven government
buildings in Phoenix. 1. FBI, 2. Secret Service, 3. Alcohol,
Tobacco & Firearms, 4. IRS, 5. Immigration & Naturalization,
6. Phoenix Police Department, 7. National Guard Headquarters.]
[Those arrested on these charges were :