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View Full Version : Tax evasionists Ed and Elaine Brown convicted.



LS1 Miata
07-10-2009, 01:13 AM
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Tax evaders Ed and Elaine Brown were convicted Thursday of amassing weapons, explosives and ****y traps and plotting to kill federal agents during a nine-month standoff in 2007 at their fort-like home in rural New Hampshire.

The couple, who do not recognize the federal government's authority to tax its citizens, held hands and looked straight ahead as the verdict was read. They refused to stand when the jury and judge left the courtroom.

The jury convicted them of stockpiling weapons at their Plainfield home to commit violent crimes and conspiring to use deadly force to prevent their arrest on tax evasion convictions from January 2007. Combined, the maximum penalty for Brown, 66, and his wife, 68, are two life sentences.

After the verdicts, their separate lawyers declined to comment. A sentencing date was set for Sept. 3.

From January to October 2007, the Browns holed up in their hilltop home behind 8-inch concrete walls to avoid arrest and 63-month prison sentences on convictions of conspiring to evade taxes on Elaine Brown's nearly $2 million from her dental practice.

During the standoff, the Browns welcomed a parade of anti-tax, anti-government sympathizers, four of whom have been convicted of helping them stockpile weapons and sent to prison. One visitor was Randy Weaver, whose wife and son were killed along with a deputy U.S. marshal at a 1992 shootout in Ruby Ridge, Idaho.

In one media interview, Ed Brown said: "The chief should know, along with the U.S. marshals, along with the local county sheriff — especially the county sheriff, local police and local state police — if they come in here to do us in, they kill my wife, myself or both or try to arrest us, I said the chief of police in this town, the sheriff, the sheriff himself will die. This is war now, folks."

The two were arrested in October 2007 — no shots fired — by U.S. marshals pretending to be supporters who pounced on the couple while sharing pizza with them on their front porch.

During the trial, Ed Brown testified the weapons were for self-defense, saying he believed the government planned to kill him and his wife. He said he didn't start building the bombs until after federal agents made a failed attempt to arrest him. Prosecutors said many weapons were there already. He also said the property was ****y trapped to scare intruders, not harm them.

Elaine Brown did not testify. Her lawyer, Bjorn Lang, said that aside from a pistol she was carrying when she was arrested, there was no proof she had ever possessed any of the weapons strewn about her house.

The two were also convicted of conspiracy to prevent their arrests, conspiracy to forcibly resist arrest, being felons in possession of firearms, obstruction of justice, failure to appear for sentencing and (for Mr. Brown only) failure to appear at trial.

The verdict came after seven hours of deliberation over two days.

Afterward, the prosecution denounced the couples.

"By rejecting the rule of the law and substituting a personal code involving weapons, explosives and threats, the defendants committed increasingly serious crimes," acting U.S. Attorney Michael Gunnison said. "Their conduct has no place in a civil society."

U.S. Marshal Steven Monier said the standoff went on longer then authorities would have liked but it had a successful outcome.

"To do it the way we ended up doing it, and that is introducing the undercover team and essentially driving up the driveway to make the arrest, we think it was the right way to go," he said.


http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jNFgaorE2z9cYaXyjNlc0rQtQznQD99B6H5O0

Alpheus
07-10-2009, 01:17 AM
Elaine Brown did not testify. Her lawyer, Bjorn Lang, said that aside from a pistol she was carrying when she was arrested, there was no proof she had ever possessed any of the weapons strewn about her house.

Kudos to the lawyer. I could not say something like that with a straight face.

Elbs
07-10-2009, 02:54 AM
Government gotta eat.

wilhelm
07-10-2009, 09:08 AM
The couple, who do not recognize the federal government's authority to tax its citizens

I remember seeing a documentary that raised this topic a while back..

FullMetalJackass
07-10-2009, 02:18 PM
It is only okay to cheat the system if you are a democrat and appointed to the present regime.

deagle
07-10-2009, 03:53 PM
It is only okay to cheat the system if you are a democrat and appointed to the present regime.



maybe they were doing it to protect themselves during the previous regime instead during the time of alleged offenses.

they do bring up a good point about taxes though a little bit.

i woulda fled to canada ! lol

California Joe
07-10-2009, 03:57 PM
It is only okay to cheat the system if you are a democrat and appointed to the present regime.

Give me a f*cking break with this will you please? These people are simply assholes. They live not far from me up here and most of the locals think they're a ridiculous pair of tax cheating nuts. Pure and simple.

BlackJack22
07-10-2009, 04:37 PM
It is only okay to cheat the system if you are a democrat and appointed to the present regime.
Yeah and if your Halliburton

Chulo
07-10-2009, 05:09 PM
kinda sounds like someone else.. but then again, they got a way with murder, in the name of a revolution. Must have been that tax issue.. those IRS brought down alot of people

California Joe
07-10-2009, 05:25 PM
Not everything is a political statement for f*ckssakes, assholes transcend party lines.

martinexsquaddie
07-11-2009, 04:17 AM
stupid people.
rather than jail exile them to say sweden and watch there heads explode as they have to pay shed loads of taxes
:)
US milita retards who belive they live in a socalist tryanny while being more heavily armed than most army's.
In most of europe they would'nt be allowed pointed sticks. not because we are freedom hating asshats. Its just in euroweenie land we don't allow people with serious mental health issues to have access to firarms

PeterRJG
07-11-2009, 05:26 AM
Evasionists? It's "evaders". :D

Laconian
07-11-2009, 09:31 AM
I've noticed a trend in these tax evaders and folks that claim the US has no right to tax them(other than the fact that they're crazier than run-over dogs): they are always convicted by a jury of their peers.

It's all fun and games until the G doesn't get its cut.

California Joe
07-11-2009, 10:16 AM
Yeah, they do. When it comes right down to it, regular citizens have no sympathy for people that don't feel like paying. Everyone bitches about their taxes. But only the real nuts set ****ytraps for law enforcement.

Hell, NH has no sales tax...

The broad is a goddamned dentist making great money and they just didn't feel like paying taxes on it.

And all this hate happened way before Obama happened on the scene.

Laconian
07-11-2009, 10:26 AM
My agency elders (T-men) have been chasing tax evaders since the Whiskey Rebellion. Not wanting to pay the Government (any government) is nothing new; somebody famous said, "Render to Caesar what is Caesar's."

There were some Feds back in the day that didn't pay taxes either and there was some loophole that they couldn't be fined/prosecuted under. Now, it is listed in your code of conduct "you must pay income and other taxes."

California Joe
07-11-2009, 10:34 AM
Yeah, I remember from my background check for my clearance that financial improprieties were one of the immediate red flags that would get you bounced.

Thought of you yesterday, I was watching "Rum Runners, Moonshiners & Bootleggers" on the history channel. :)

Laconian
07-11-2009, 10:56 AM
I've seen that. It was pretty cool. I liked the fact that some of the folks they talked to were whiskey/bourbon historians. I'd have loved to have studied booze in school - and gotten a degree for it!