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details of ELF informant arrest

by olympian
One of the six people arrested this month on federal charges they were part of a sabotage campaign has agreed to testify against others charged in the case, according to court papers.
A defense motion filed in U.S. District Court in Eugene says Stanislas Meyerhoff, 28, a former Eugene resident who lately has been attending Piedmont Community College in Charlottesville, Va., is one of the informants the federal government has relied on for evidence in the investigation.

Public defender Craig Weinerman named Meyerhoff and another man, Jacob Ferguson, as informants in a motion for the release of Chelsea Gerlach, who is being held without bail.

Ferguson admitted taking part in the firebombing of a U.S. Department of Agriculture plant research lab in Olympia in 1998, a Superior Lumber Co. fire in 2001 and a tree farm fire the same year, according to court papers.

The motion gave no age or hometown for Ferguson, but noted that he has not been charged in any of the cases. The motion is to be argued today in U.S. District Court in Eugene.

Gerlach, 28, who grew up in the Eugene area and worked as a disc jockey in Portland, faces trial on indictments she and Meyerhoff helped topple a high tension power line outside Bend in 1999 and that she served as a lookout while others were setting fire to the Childers Meat Co. plant in Eugene in 2001.

No group took responsibility for toppling the electric tower, but the Animal Liberation Front took credit for the meat plant fire to protest the treatment of livestock.

Authorities also have named Gerlach as a suspect in the 1998 arson of a ski resort in Vail, Colo., that caused $12 million in damage, though she has not been charged. The Earth Liberation Front took credit for that, saying it was fighting ski resort expansion into lynx habitat.

Meyerhoff also was indicted on charges he firebombed the office of Superior Lumber Co. in Glendale, now known as Swanson Group, in 2001, as well as offices and a truck shop at the Jefferson Poplar Farm in Clatskanie the same year.

Earth Liberation Front took credit for both of those.

In a status hearing Tuesday, Meyerhoff asked the court to show mercy.

“I pray that the court is merciful with those who have renounced these crimes and have moved on to be students and professionals,” he said.

Weinerman characterized Meyerhoff and Ferguson as “serial arsonists” whose credibility was undermined by the fact that they face life in prison without parole if convicted on charges of being in possession of a firebomb.

He argued that the weakness of the government’s case and Gerlach’s strong ties to the community — her mother lives in Eugene and her father lives in Sweet Home — should qualify her for release on bail.

Weinerman wrote in the motion that following his arrest Dec. 7, Meyerhoff admitted he was involved in the Childers Meat fire and claimed Gerlach also was involved, but could not recall her specific role.

He has not been charged in that fire.

Ferguson, who told authorities he also took part in the meat plant fire, characterized Gerlach’s role as a lookout with a hand-held radio, the motion said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Barry Sheldahl said the prosecution would respond to the motion in court.

“Ferguson has admitted to actually setting the fires in these arsons according to an affidavit filed in connection with the issuance of search warrants in these cases,” the motion said.

That affidavit also says that the informant, not named, went with an investigator to the tree farm in December 2004, and described how the firebombing was carried out.

In 2005, he wore a hidden microphone and obtained tape recordings of conversations with defendants Meyerhoff, Kevin Tubbs of Eugene, Daniel McGowan of New York City, and William C. Rodgers of Prescott, Ariz.

The affidavit includes a transcript of McGowan saying two of the firebombs from the tree farm fire did not go off, and a notation that investigators found a bucket of fuel at the scene with a fanny pack, typically used to hold the bomb timer, immersed in it.

McGowan was indicted on charges he joined Meyerhoff in the arsons of the lumber mill and the tree farm.
by The Olympian Online
12/13 article

Investigation into eco-arsonists used undercover informant

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GRANTS PASS, Ore. — An undercover informant helped investigators tape a conversation with one of the alleged radical environmentalists accused in a series of arson attacks and other crimes in the Pacific Northwest between 1998 and 2001.

Existence of the informant was disclosed last week by an investigator in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, N.Y., during a bail hearing for Daniel McGowan, 31, who faces indictments that he and another man firebombed the office of a wood products mill in Glendale and the office and truck shop of a tree farm in Clatskanie in 2001.

The Earth Liberation Front, an underground group that advocates economic sabotage to stop environmental destruction, claimed responsibility for the two fires. The FBI describes the group as one of the nation's leading domestic terrorist organizations.

Though his family offered to put up their homes and stocks worth about $850,000, McGowan was ordered held without bail pending transport by U.S. marshals to Oregon, said defense attorney Martin Stolar. No date has been set for McGowan's arraignment in Eugene.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Peifer, who attended the hearing, said Eugene police Detective Greg Harvey testified he made the tape from a body wire worn by an informant who talked to McGowan at a convention in New York in April 2005. On the tape, McGowan talks about going to British Columbia in 2001. The tape was not played in court, but the judge listened to excerpts before deciding against granting bail.

Peifer characterized the trip as hiding out after the arsons, both of which occurred earlier that year.

Stolar and McGowan's sister, Lisa McGowan, the vice president of a packaging company in New York, characterized the trip as a visit to a couple of friends and their new baby outside Vancouver, B.C. He crossed the border using his own passport and his family knew where he was, his sister said. He later went back to Eugene for awhile before moving to New York in 2001.

"If anybody was looking for him, Danny was not a hard person to find," Lisa McGowan said.

He took part in protests during the Republican National Convention in New York in 2004, was included, under an assumed name, in a Rolling Stone article on those protests, and was working for the Women's Law Initiative in Brooklyn, which helps abused women, at the time of his arrest, his sister said.

Lisa McGowan said her brother worked in a cafe frequented by political activists while living in Eugene, and was regularly confronted by police who knew him by name, often while he was riding his bicycle.

"Being an activist doesn't mean you are a criminal," Lisa McGowan said. "My brother has his beliefs. We are proud of the things he fights for."
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