True Crime
Related: About this forumReal arrest -- and prison time -- for man who plotted false arrests of NC judges
Also: Founder And Creator Of Anti-Government Website Is Sentenced To Prison For Communicating Interstate Threats (U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of North Carolina)
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Source: Charlotte Observer
Real arrest and prison time for man who plotted false arrests of NC judges
Anna Douglas
Fri, August 25, 2023 at 1:58 PM EDT·3 min read
A mans attempt to inspire false arrests of government officials in North Carolina and more than 30 other states has landed him behind bars and hell be there for the next 10 years.
The U.S. Attorneys Office for the Western District of North Carolina on Friday announced the sentencing of the man who was initially accused last year of putting bounties out for arrests of elected officials, including sheriffs and judges. Prosecutors say he admitted to running a website called the Peoples Bureau of Investigation, where he promoted fake legal documents purportedly connected to a fictitious federal court system.
The scam which encouraged everyday citizens to make arrests was entirely made up.
The Charlotte Observer first reported on the case in late 2022 when judges in Charlotte spoke out about safety concerns surrounding the shadowy online vigilante group which was accusing them and hundreds of other elected officials across the country of treason and environmental crimes.
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Read more: https://news.yahoo.com/real-arrest-prison-time-man-175836439.html
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Source: U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of North Carolina
Founder And Creator Of Anti-Government Website Is Sentenced To Prison For Communicating Interstate Threats
Friday, August 25, 2023
For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of North Carolina
Co-Defendant Also Sentenced for Communicating Threats
ASHEVILLE, N.C. The founder and creator of an anti-government website was sentenced late yesterday in federal court in Asheville to 10 years in prison, for aiding and abetting threatening interstate communications, announced Dena J. King, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina. In addition to the prison term imposed, Timothy Michael Dever, 57, of Naperville, Illinois, was ordered to serve three years under court supervision after he is released from prison. Devers co-defendant, Darris Gibson Moody, 57, of Waynesville, N.C., was sentenced to two years in prison and three years of supervised release for making a threatening interstate communication.
Robert M. DeWitt, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI in North Carolina, joins U.S. Attorney King in making todays announcement.
According to filed court documents and court proceedings, Dever was the creator and administrator of a website for a fictitious entity, the Peoples Bureau of Investigation (PBI). As the websites administrator, Dever hosted, maintained, and provided content for PBI, including templates for court judgments, or Writs of Execution, issued by the U.S. Environmental District Court, a fictitious court that purportedly had convicted hundreds of public officials and private individuals of various bogus crimes. The website claimed that the writs gave private citizens, like Moody, the authority to conduct a citizens arrest of the individuals on the fake writs. The website also claimed that those arrested could face a punishment of monetary fines, imprisonment, and even death, and that anyone who made a citizens arrest of the persons named in the writs was eligible to receive a monetary reward of up to $20,000.
According to court documents and the sentencing hearing, Dever promoted the writs as a mechanism for removing federal, state, and local officials from their positions. Dever made the template for the fake writs available for download on PBIs website, as well as other documents and videos that explained the purpose of the writs and how to serve them. For example, one video on the website was a recorded radio talk show, where Dever and another individual discussed how private citizens could arrest a sheriff, a judge and a governor, who they claimed to have been convicted in the highest court of the land. Dever also maintained on PBIs website a list that contained the names, home addresses, and personal information of victims who had been falsely named as convicted defendants in the fake writs. Court records show that the PBI website listed the personal identifying information of over 900 victims, located in approximately 32 different states.
As Dever previously admitted in court, PBIs website also enabled group members to use a digital app to have encrypted communications in online chatrooms and via text messages, and to share information on how to create, use, and serve the writs. Dever also used PBIs website to raise funds by soliciting direct donations and selling PBI merchandise.
Moody was a like-minded PBI group member who accused her targets of having been convicted of corruption, environmental charges, and even treason. Moody used the PBI website to generate fake arrest writs for 57 individuals, most of whom resided in the Western District of North Carolina, including sheriffs, judges, and other government officials and private individuals, and used software to fax the fake arrest notices to the recipients.
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Read more: https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdnc/pr/founder-and-creator-anti-government-website-sentenced-prison-communicating-interstate
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