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CA man does five years for possessing ten tracers

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For the link impaired: from http://ktla.trb.com/news/local/la-me-sherburne21jan21,0,142568.story?coll=ktla-home-3
A Family Deposed by Force

The Sherburnes were living as survivalists and selling military surplus when the feds moved in. They were lawbreakers, victims -- or both.

By Hugo Martín
Times Staff Writer

January 21, 2004

When Trudy Sherburne returned to her desert home near Victorville after a short trip on Easter weekend in 1998, she thought her house was on fire. Government vehicles with flashing lights surrounded the place.

She quickly realized her mistake. The house was being raided.

Sheriff's deputies, bomb squad specialists and military investigators were rummaging through each room, under the assumption that Trudy Sherburne and her husband, Christopher, were right-wing extremists with ties to Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. They believed they might find a cache of weapons and explosives hidden among the inventory of the Sherburnes' military surplus business.

At the end of the five-month investigation, the Sherburnes — a deeply religious couple with six children — each pleaded no contest to one felony count of possessing 10 tracer bullets, which illuminate the trajectory and are legal in several states but not California. Prosecutors never proved a link between the couple and McVeigh.

But by that time, their home was demolished and their business in ruins. Trudy Sherburne went to jail for five months. Her husband started a prison term that lasted five years because he refused to accept parole conditions that barred him from seeing his wife.

The ordeal has turned the Sherburnes into folk heroes among some religious fundamentalists and gun rights activists. They see the couple as innocent victims of overzealous law enforcement, itching to nab home-grown terrorists in the wake of the Oklahoma bombing. Gun Owners of America, a gun-rights lobbying group based in Virginia, raised thousands of dollars for the couple's legal defense, and conservative radio commentator Jane Chastain, among others, has taken up the Sherburnes' cause.

The tactics used by officials only fed the outrage. Investigators, who portrayed the couple as dangerous outlaws and weapons suppliers for militia groups, even searched the home of the Sherburnes' pastor and the Christian school their children attended.

"We weren't trying to overthrow the government or take out the president," Trudy Sherburne said. "We had no ill intent."

Were the Sherburnes anti-government extremists or simply an eccentric family living a survivalist existence in Southern California's desert frontier? And if the couple were so dangerous, why did prosecutors succeed in getting a conviction on only one count each?

The answers may be revealed this year when a San Bernardino County Superior Court judge considers a lawsuit Trudy Sherburne filed against the county. The suit seeks $2 million in damages, arguing that multiple raids of the family home were unreasonable and based on weak evidence. The suit also accuses sheriff's deputies of ruining the couple's military surplus business by leaving the inventory — shoes, pants, ready-to-eat meals — in piles on the ground, where it was exposed to the elements and thieves.

The county has filed its own lawsuit, asking a judge to fine the Sherburnes $250,000 for using their home to stockpile the military surplus inventory in violation of county zoning codes. The county has also billed the family $25,000 for the cost of demolishing the house in 2001 for building code violations. No court date has been set for either lawsuit, and the Sherburnes have yet to pay the county bill.

Marjorie Mikels, an Upland attorney and friend of Trudy Sherburne, said the couple had "nothing there that was of any import — certainly nothing worth destroying their lives and their home."

David Hardy, a Tucson attorney who wrote about the Sherburnes' case on a Gun Owners of America website, agreed.

"I think they [investigators] assumed the worst out of the available evidence, and when it wasn't the worst, they didn't back off an inch," he said.

But county officials insist the searches were legitimate and resulted in the destruction of dozens of dangerous weapons. If they weren't illegal, why were they destroyed? If they were illegal, why wasn't the couple convicted of owning them?

The investigators say their suspicions about the Sherburnes were confirmed when they found five videotapes titled "Militia of Montana First Aid Series" and a handwritten diagram showing a tunnel system beneath the home. Following the diagram, they discovered the remains of a 5,000-gallon cistern that Christopher Sherburne had expanded and fortified.Oh no, FIRST AID VIDEOS!!! They MUST have wanted to overthrow the .gov!

Inside the underground rooms, investigators found a stockpile of ammunition, five 55-gallon water drums, a portable bathroom and six industrial-size batteries, according to court records. The entrance to one of the rooms was hidden behind a false wall in the house.Ammo, water, batteries, AND A PORTA-POTTY!!!! Terrorists!

Search warrants show that, in addition to the tracer bullets, investigators discovered four used missile tube launchers, an inert 2.75-inch rocket warhead, an inert 81-mm mortar round, homemade explosives, various types of ammunition and illegal signal flares. Bomb experts destroyed some of the military devices in the nearby desert. "All that stuff was there," said sheriff's Det. Bryce Mibeck, who investigated the case. "That is the nature of a plea bargain: You drop some charges to get convictions on other charges."

At the very least, the evidence showed that the Sherburnes are not a typical suburban family.

Trudy Sherburne, 57, has a master's degree in early childhood education and has home-schooled her three youngest boys. Christopher Sherburne, 59, is an army veteran with a bachelor of science in engineering. On the weekend the family home was raided, he was in Florida, repairing a boat he said he hoped would carry medicine, Bibles and supplies to war-ravaged Sudan as part of a Christian relief effort.

The family home was built by Christopher Sherburne's father in the 1940s. It was situated between Hesperia and Victorville, where the only neighbors were dried shrubs and Joshua trees. A diesel generator provided the electricity.

For nearly 15 years, the home was headquarters for the Sherburnes' business, Genuine G.I. Surplus. The 2.5-acre property was strewn with metal shelving, empty ammunition boxes and crates with military markings. The couple bought most items in bulk at military auctions and sold them at flea markets and gun shows.

Robert Roy Templeton, president of Crossroads of the West Gun Shows, said he watched the Sherburnes and their children sell clothes, toy parachutes and other gadgets at his gun show for nearly nine years. "I never did see any indication that he had any weapons at all," Templeton said.

But sheriff's Det. Harry Hatch, an arson and bomb expert, confiscated a used missile launcher from the Sherburnes at one show, according to court records. Hatch warned them that it was illegal to have the device.

The Sherburnes' problems began April 10, 1998, when sheriff's Deputy John Lawrence accompanied a code enforcement officer to the Sherburne property to look into a tip about building code violations. There, Lawrence saw metal tubes with military markings and metal cases emblazoned with the words "high explosives," according to court records.

Based on Hatch's earlier encounter with the Sherburnes, deputies got a search warrant, saying they believed "the crates, boxes and tubes contain military ordnance, which has been stolen from the military or purchased illicitly."

Over the next five months, deputies executed four more search warrants on the Sherburne property, plus 15 additional warrants seeking weapons in the homes of friends, family and customers in three states.

The Sherburnes' pastor, Allen Stanfield, who once ran the Lucerne Valley Christian School, took responsibility for the Sherburne home after the couple were arrested and became temporary guardian of the couple's three sons.

Investigators suspected the pastor might have taken some undiscovered weapons from the home. Stanfield said deputies searched his home, his tenant's home and the one-room school while children were in class. No weapons were found.

The Sherburnes have offered differing explanations about why a stash of weapons was found in their home.

At first, they insisted that every military item on their property came from the purchases they made at military auctions. Later, they said they bought the empty rocket tubes and the ammunition from individuals but didn't recall when or where.

Despite the earlier warning from Hatch, Trudy Sherburne said she didn't think the empty rocket tubes and inert warheads were illegal because she saw such items routinely bought and sold at flea markets, gun shows and swap meets.

The suggestion of a link between the Sherburnes and the Oklahoma bombing first appeared in a search warrant dated April 13, 1998.

In it, sheriff's Det. Scott Peterson described Christopher Sherburne as "a right-wing extremist, [who] was peripherally involved with the suspects in the Oklahoma City bombing, Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols."Baseless character assassination. He should be sued for slander

Peterson, who retired in 2000, could not be reached for comment.

In an interview, Det. Mibeck declined to discuss what led investigators to believe the Sherburnes were linked to the bombing, but said FBI agents interviewed Christopher Sherburne immediately after the 1995 atrocity.

The Sherburnes insist they were never interviewed by FBI agents regarding the Oklahoma bombing. Gary Johnson, an FBI spokesman in Oklahoma City, said a search of the bureau's database found no information to connect the Sherburnes to McVeigh.

If deputies were fearful of the Sherburnes, the couple were just as fearful of the world around them.

Trudy Sherburne said they stocked the underground shelter with supplies and weapons in case of a nuclear war, riot or other crisis.

"In the middle of the desert, you need a hideaway room," she said.

Christopher Sherburne had wired the property's perimeters with motion detectors to alert him to any trespassers. But the couple deny they were building bombs or explosive devices.

"I can see that things looked suspicious," Trudy Sherburne said of the underground shelter and motion detectors.

The militia videotapes that investigators found in the Sherburne home are sold on the Internet and provide instruction on such things as how to dress wounds and fractures. The Sherburnes said they had attended a few meetings of a militia group in the nearby community of Phelan but eventually broke away because the group didn't focus enough on Christianity.

By the time the investigation was over, the Sherburnes faced a 24-count indictment on charges of possession of a destructive device and other crimes, which could mean total sentences of up to 100 years in prison for each if convicted. Instead, they took a deal offered by prosecutors and pleaded no contest to possession of a destructive device —10 tracer bullets.

Gun Owners of America, which had taken up the Sherburnes' cause, was soon joined by other conservative groups, including the founders of a fundamentalist Christian website and a group pushing for tough penalties on corrupt judges.

After five months in jail, Trudy Sherburne was released and reunited with her children, who had stayed with Stanfield. She resumed selling military surplus.

Christopher Sherburne was eligible for parole after 16 months in prison. Parole conditions rarely prohibit convicted spouses from seeing each other, but in the case of the Sherburnes, "he would have access to the same kind of weapons that got him in trouble in the first place," said Terry Thornton, a spokeswoman for the California Board of Corrections.***??? Are they accusing the wife of still having "illegal" tracers? Pure crap.

Christopher Sherburne wouldn't agree to stay away from his wife, so he spent a total of five years in prison. Trudy said she would have given up the military sales to free him had she been told that that was the reason they were kept apart.

Meanwhile, county code enforcement officials declared the family home a public nuisance, saying the structure was substandard, had poor ventilation and heating, and was infested with rodents and insects.

The home was demolished under a county order in August 2001.

County officials defend the tactics of investigators, saying all of the searches in the Sherburne case were legal. Regarding whatever personal property was destroyed or damaged during the investigations, deputies blame thieves and vandals who may have pilfered from the home after the couple were imprisoned.They ARE vandals!

The Sherburnes now live in a mobile home in the high desert community of Apple Valley. They make a living selling shovels, flashlights, toys and other items at flea markets and swap meets.

The Sherburnes and county officials have tried several times, without success, to settle the Sherburne lawsuit and the county's suit for $250,000. The Sherburnes say they are not looking for a generous settlement but simply want to hold officials accountable.

"We believe in this country," said Trudy Sherburne. "We just feel the authorities need to abide by the same laws that the citizens must abide by."
Copyright © 2004, The Los Angeles Times
 
Y'all can scan my posts in this forum, I've always said that they won't initially be going after the pillars of the community, they'll be going after "fringey freaky" folks for whom little public sympathy would be found.
 
A devout religious family going about minding their own business has been destroyed by JBTs. 10 tracers, first-aid videos, underground "safe rooms," and harmless military surplus. To think they had the audacity to store water in the DESERT. Further, the audacity to set up motion detectors to protect their inventory. Moreover, their home was DEMOLISHED, just to make sure they were completely demoralized, along with some insane order that, upon parole, husband and wife were not to see each other (family values anyone).

They were railroaded. Their cost of leading free lives was everything. Does Claire Wolfe have an opinion on this?

:what: :cuss: :fire:
 
If they had anything but the tracers, they would've used it too. It is obvious it was so flimsy that a jury wouldn't have bought it. These folks had a bad lawyer.
 
OMG! Five years away from your wife and children for 10 tracer bullets? Storing supplies in an underground cistern? Inert, as in INERT hunks of metal, practice mortar rounds? Empty missile tubes? Books? Your home destroyed? Friends' homes searched?

California is not part of the of the USA anymore.
 
Search warrants show that, in addition to the tracer bullets, investigators discovered four used missile tube launchers, an inert 2.75-inch rocket warhead, an inert 81-mm mortar round, homemade explosives, various types of ammunition and illegal signal flares. Bomb experts destroyed some of the military devices in the nearby desert

Doesn't sound a whole lot different from EVERY OTHER milsurp store I've ever been to...

-Teuf
 
But, In California, inert mortars may become active through a unique scientific phenomenon called Lockyer Syndrome. Empty rocket tubes have been known to spontaneously manufacture rockets.
 
It is this kind of government behavior that causes anti-government sentiments to grow. :fire: Did anybody notice that the government was engaged in a huge anti-militia campaign in the 1990s and that when the ATF and other toned down their behavior the militia activity and membership dropped off? Some say that 9-11 was caused by how we (the USA) behaved internationally and that if we would not interfere with other countries, they would not hate us or want to kill us. The difference is that there people were AMERICAN CITIZENS and were not trying to kill anyone. Militant Islamic terrorists would still want to kill us (infidels) no matter what we did or didn't do.
 
Man, I feel safer with these evil terrorists having their home destroyed, their lifestyle scrapped and their family torn apart over some tracers, boxes with military labels and harmless tubes. Another victory for the Law Above All types and their War on Terror.

Yeah, these folks may be a bit nuttier than your average peanut butter, and they lived a life I wouldn't intentionally choose, but I'm still waiting to hear about the harm they caused. Ooooh ... they owned tracers and deactivated military equipment. That means we should stick 'em in jail and knock down their house, right?
But sheriff's Det. Harry Hatch, an arson and bomb expert, confiscated a used missile launcher from the Sherburnes at one show, according to court records. Hatch warned them that it was illegal to have the device.
Is there a California law banning these? Or did Deppity Detective Hatch just think it would make a neat wallhanger, so he confiscated it? Or was he just ignorant about the laws he was trying to enforce?

These people give good police a bad name. As Henry mentioned, they fuel the very fires they claim they are working to extinguish. There will always be people who hate the government for their own reasons, but actions like this work to spread that hatred and fear more than any "militia" literature or the best wacko propagandists.

We're from the government.
We're here to help ourselves.
 
After reading all that, one comes away with the following:

1. The family didn't have anything dangerous. No explosives, no rockets, no grenades, nothing. Just minor technical violations like ‘tracer rounds'. Wow, rounds that leave a light trail when you fire them. Holy crap!

2. The family was conservative, and religious. That's just bound to draw attention now-a-days.

3. They stored water, and supplies and such. They were prepared for disasters and were more self-sufficient than regular folks. That makes you a ‘survivalist wacko terrorist nut'. Oh, and they didn't live in some city or neatly planned suburbs which greatly compounds it.

4. They had first-aid videos with the word militia in it. Automatic terrorist!

So when you add it all up, what do you get? You get a family that didn't do anything wrong, who is/was rotting in jail and broken apart by the gov't for daring to own... tracers.

Then we have folks like the criminal here with 30 arrests running around the streets, while others rot in jail for bullets that light up when you fire them.

We need a crying smilie... :(
 
That 10 tracer bullet charge may be valid, but it's a CYA move. I hope they sue the stuffing out of the raiders.
 
Unbelievable. I would be doing life between my "high"-caps and my AR. Plus, even worse, at least one of my handguns is not CA compliant.
 
I really hate and hesitate to say it, but abuses and outrages like this really begins to undermine the "good will" argument with which the State is presumed to act.

To a large degree, this is the philosophical underpinnings of the special protections afforded to the state's Agents. (i.e. illegitimacy of offering resistance to arrest, "interferance" with an officer in the performance of their "duties", and so on)

If that "presumption of good will" decays beyond the point where it is no longer believable by the "normal prudent man", it will ultimately threaten to legitimize repelling boarders with all force necessary, which is a losing game for all concerned.
 
Gee, and everyone said I was out of line in the "good shoot" post for pointing out that maybe you want to question WHY the SWAT team is on the premesis. :rolleyes:
 
Ojibweindian,

When are we going to start making all the anticonstitution, un-American tyrants and traitors and oathbreakers (the ones who pass the so-called "laws," and the armed henchmen who enforce them) try to fly low under *our* radar?

There are still more of us than there are of them. How come we all just go on letting them pick us off one by one? When are we all going to get angry together?

The arrogant despots are *so* cocky and confident that we sheeple will always be compliant and docile and never, ever fight back. I sure wish we could wipe those smug smirks off their faces.

There must be some way to put the fear of God back in them. I don't mean some isolated and rather pathetic spasm like the OKC bombing, which only gave them the excuse they needed to steal even more of our freedom across the board.

I mean fix things so that violating their oaths of office and violating people's rights would be so dangerous that no one who wasn't suicidal would take the job, whatever it paid. It ought to be *at least* as hazardous as service in Iraq. Right now, they have to turn people away, so many are lining up for all the good-payin', high-respect "law" enforcement jobs. (I hope nobody is going to claim government enforcers are poorly paid. They get paid a heck of a lot more money than people in honest jobs like hamburger flippers and convenience store clerks, and they are in less danger on the job too. )

How can the people who did this to that family look in the mirror? Do they go to church and congratulate themselves on what good boys they are, and maybe even sing in the choir, oblivious to the fact that they are essentially the soldiers of the antichrist?

Maimaktes
 
This has shaken me. After I left PRK I was studying the laws in hindsight. There is a provision, and I am way too lazy on a Friday to look it up, that any location with more than 2,000 (or 2,500) rounds was illegal for handy homeowner to have. This article could have been about my arrest. Well, except I lived in a real affluent area. I had to rent an extra truck to move the "stuff." :uhoh:
 
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