Three men were sentenced Tuesday to years in prison after admitting to taking part in an unsuccessful plot to bomb a highway bridge in Ohio with what turned out to be a dud device provided by a government informant.
The father of one of the defendants, 20-year-old Connor Stevens, complained to the judge that his son had been entrapped.
"My son is guilty," James Stevens said, "and so is the government."
Prosecutors
had described the suspects as self-proclaimed anarchists who acted out
of anger against corporate America and the government.
All three defendants — Stevens, 26-year-old Douglas Wright and 20-year-old Brandon Baxter — apologized in court. Their attorneys said the sentences would be appealed.
Wright,
an Indianapolis man authorities called the ringleader, received the
toughest sentence, 11 1/2 years. He apologized to his family and the
community, saying he was an addict and needed help for substance abuse,
not just prison.Baxter, of Lakewood in suburban Cleveland, was given nearly 10 years in prison. Connor Stevens, of Berea, the least involved of the trio, was sentenced to more than eight years.
U.S. District Judge David Dowd
had ruled last week that the men should be sentenced as terrorists,
making them subject to harsher prison terms. After leaving prison, all
three will be on supervised release for the rest of their lives.
A fourth defendant is being sentenced Wednesday, and a fifth is undergoing a psychiatric exam.
Stevens'
mother, Gail, broke into tears and stopped reading a prepared
statement. She portrayed her son as a gentle soul who shooed flies out
of the house instead of killing them.
Brandon
Baxter's father, Andy Baxter, challenged the government's case and
mentioned his own battle with alcohol abuse. He told the judge his son
had "a heart of gold, and please make this as light as possible."
Stevens,
Baxter and Wright pleaded guilty to conspiring to use a weapon of mass
destruction, knowingly attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction
and attempting to damage property with explosives. There was no plea
deal that would have reduced their sentences.
Last
week, Dowd backed a government request to consider stricter sentences
based on a "terrorist enhancement" for the trio. The ruling that the
three were trying to intimidate the government expanded possible
sentences from five or six years to 15 to 30 years or more.
The
men were arrested by the FBI and had targeted a bridge over Cuyahoga
Valley National Park between Cleveland and Akron. The FBI has said that
the public was never in danger and that the device was a dud provided by
an informant.
The defense
called the case entrapment, with the informant guiding the way, and said
the plot was more an act of vandalism than anti-government terrorism.
They asked for sentences in the range of five years.
The
government said the plot "was meant to convey a message to the civilian
population, the corporate world, the financial system, and all levels
of government."
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