Source: Ogden Standard-Examiner |
In the latest twist to a deadly shootout that stunned the residents of Ogden, Utah, a recently revealed search warrant affidavit provides evidence that suggests the defendant, Matthew David Stewart, 37, may have been an anti-government extremist.
The shootout began on January 4, 2012, after police launched a raid on Stewart’s residence to execute a search warrant—an informant had alleged he was growing marijuana (16 plants were reportedly later found). According to police, Stewart hid, opening fire on officers as they searched his residence. Six officers were hit, some more than once, and Ogden police officer Jared Francom was wounded fatally. Stewart allegedly continued firing as the officers fled the residence. Police eventually wounded and subdued him in a backyard shed.
Stewart was charged with aggravated murder, seven counts of attempted aggravated murder, and production of a controlled substance in a “drug free zone,” along with a dangerous weapons enhancement.
In March, authorities released an affidavit explaining the results of the search. According to the affidavit, Stewart’s former girlfriend said that Stewart was “into” conspiracy theories and that he believed the federal government had no right to collect taxes (the primary belief of the anti-government extremist tax protest movement). She claimed that he had not paid his own federal or state taxes since 2005 and that, if he were “forced” to pay taxes, he would “kill IRS employees.” According to the girlfriend, Stewart claimed that Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh was “misunderstood.”
The affidavit further claimed that police recovered “computer-generated documents” related to anti-government extremism, anti-police Web sites, Oklahoma City bombing Web sites, instructions for making potassium chloride (used in explosives), and a map to the closest IRS building (where Stewart once worked as a security guard), among other items. According to the affidavit, police also discovered “what appeared to be the makings of a bomb,” which were later removed and detonated by the bomb squad.
Last summer, according to police, Stewart had allegedly told someone that if police ever raided him, he would “go out in a blaze of glory and shoot to kill.” After the release of the affidavit, a neighbor of Stewart’s told a local television station that Stewart had allegedly talked about moving to Montana and “get[ting] myself a compound.”
Officer Francom was the first police officer to have been killed by a suspected domestic extremist since May 2010, when two West Memphis, Arkansas, officers were killed by anti-government “sovereign citizens.” Since 2000, 27 police officers have been killed in the United States by domestic extremists.
1 comment:
"Domestic "extremists"? Don't you mean "anti-government terrorists"? Oh, but wait -- a "terrorist" is only a Muslim, eh? Crazed gun-toters who hate law and order can't be terrorists if they're white and they speak English, can they? Labeling them "terrorists" would be passing a value judgment, and the oh-so-neutral news business would NEVER want to do that. And it risks offending your readers who also think like Stewart.Just use the "T-word" for all the Muslim radicals who have killed local cops in the past few years. Which have been how many? But white people who hate Washington D.C. so much that they kill local lawmen, nothing terroristic about them...
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