December 2008: A pair of "Patriot" movement radicals -- the father-son team of Bruce and Joshua Turnidge, who wanted "to attack the political infrastructure" -- threaten a bank in Woodburn, Oregon, with a bomb in the hopes of extorting money that would end their financial difficulties, for which they blamed the government. Instead, the bomb goes off and kills two police officers. The men eventually are convicted and sentenced to death for the crime.
October 1, 2010

This week, Time magazine offered an inside look at "the Secret World of Extreme Militias," the increasingly dangerous ranks of anti-government extremists, white supremacists, tax deniers, gun rights activists and anti-abortion radicals. But even as Barton Gellman reported that "Obama's ascendancy unhinged the radical right, offering a unified target to competing camps of racial, nativist and religious animus," Americans learned that the December 2008 bombing of an Oregon bank which killed two policemen and wounded two others was fueled by what Gellman deemed the "Obama factor."

As the Oregonian reported Wednesday, what seemed like a botched bank robbery at a Woodburn Wells Fargo in the days just after the election of Barack Obama allegedly had a much more sinister motivation:

Bruce and Joshua Turnidge had long harbored anti-government feelings, but the November 2008 presidential election of Barack Obama served as a "catalyst" for the father and son to plant a bomb at the West Coast Bank and plan a bank robbery, prosecutors said today.

The two men feared that the Obama administration would impose a slate of new restrictions on gun ownership, Marion County deputy district attorney Katie Suver said in opening statements in the aggravated murder trials for the two men. Bruce Turnidge, years ago during the Clinton administration, had similarly anticipated a crackdown on Second Amendment rights and sought funding to start his own militia, she said.

Prosecutors assert that from even from the beginning of their investigation, Bruce Turnidge wasn't shy about his political beliefs:

When the FBI went to Bruce Turnidge's house the first time, he struck up a conversation with one of the agents ranging from his support of the Second Amendment to the origin of a racist slur against African Americans. Suver said that Turnidge then told the agent, "Now we have one in the White House."

Turnidge, prosecutors claim, also "had told others that the Oklahoma City federal building bombing was a good thing that would keep the government in check."

If this all sounds frighteningly familiar, it should. After all, Holocaust Museum killer James Von Bruun declared, "Obama does what his Jew owners tell him to do." Richard Poplawski, who murdered three Pittsburgh policemen in April 2009 was said to have feared "the Obama gun ban that's on the way" and "didn't like our rights being infringed upon." And Gellman reported, Maine dirty bomber James Trafton "had filled out an application to join the National Socialist Movement and declared an ambition to kill the President-elect."

Oregon is no stranger to right-wing terrorism. In the 1990's Shelley Shannon torched abortion clinics across Oregon, Idaho, Nevada, and California. (In 1993, she shot Dr. George Tiller in both arms, an act which inspired Tiller's later assassin, Scott Roeder.) And as the New York Times recounted in 1995, Shannon was quite clear as to whether she considered her crimes terrorism:

Handcuffed and nondescript in jailhouse blues, Shelley Shannon, a housewife from rural Oregon, stood before a Federal judge here on June 7 and admitted waging a terrorism campaign against abortion clinics and doctors.

Now fifteen years later, father and son extremists Bruce and Joshua Turnidge apparently have joined Shannon in Oregon's pantheon of right-wing terrorists.

(This piece also appears at Perrspectives.)

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