As you recall, Scott Roeder stalked, harassed and ultimately in cold-blood assassinated Dr. George Tiller.
Tea Party organizers include the Rupert Murdoch network of assets and the Kochtopus Network of assets.
Whois RightMarch.com
Logos & Links, 912dc.org, Freedomworks Organized Crime
http://truthiest.blogspot.com/search?q=rightmarch
Fox Network includes Glenn Beck who created the 9-12 Project and the 9-12dc.org March on Washington. Koch network includes the twin spawn of Citizens For a Sound Economy (FREEDOMWORKS and AMERICANS FOR PROSPERITY).
Murdoch's Fox created 9-12dc, but Freedomworks controlled it down to charging for speaker time at the stage microphones, to placement of the sponsors logos on it website.
One of the logos was RightMarch.org, a project of William Greene, who is a frequent partner of Randall Terry (Operation Rescue). Terry attended and witnessed for Scott Roeder's murder trial.
Roeder is a militiaman, convicted of transporting bomb-making materials. As Murdoch's spokesperson Sean Hannity said "a Timothy McVeigh wannabe". Neither Glenn Beck, nor Sean Hannity says as word that Rupert Murdoch doesn't want them to say.
Suspect in George Tiller shooting is linked to anti-government group
... Active in 'Freemen'
Roeder, who in the 1990s was a manufacturing assemblyman, also was involved in the "Freemen" movement.
"Freemen" was a term adopted by those who claimed sovereignty from government jurisdiction and operated under their own legal system, which they called common-law courts. Adherents declared themselves exempt from laws, regulations and taxes and often filed liens against judges, prosecutors and others, claiming that money was owed to them as compensation.
In April 1996, Roeder was arrested in Topeka after Shawnee County sheriff's deputies stopped him for not having a proper license plate. In his car, officers said they found ammunition, a blasting cap, a fuse cord, a one-pound can of gunpowder and two 9-volt batteries, with one connected to a switch that could have been used to trigger a bomb.
Jim Jimerson, supervisor of the Kansas City ATF's bomb and arson unit, worked on the case.
"There wasn't enough there to blow up a building," Jimerson said at the time, but he said it could make several powerful pipe bombs. ...
Anti-abortion murder suspect Scott Roeder had ties to right-wing militia movement
Scott P. Roeder, the 51 year-old man being held as a person of interest in the murder of abortion provider Dr. George Tiller, was previously arrested for having bomb-making materials and was affiliated with right-wing militia members known as Freemen.
... The commander of the Kansas Unorganized Citizens Militia in the mid-1990s, Morris Wilson, said he knew Roeder."I'd say he's a good ol' boy except he was just so fanatic about abortion," said Wilson, according to McClatchy. "He was always talking about how awful abortion was. But there's a lot of people who think abortion is awful."
Suzanne James, a former director of victim's services for Shawnee County, said she remembered Roeder from his previous trial in 1996.
"He was part of the One Supreme Court, a Freemen group based out of Shawnee County," James told McClatchy reporter Judy Thomas. "He was fanatic about a lot of things. I went to one of his court appearances and thought, 'This guy is dangerous.' There were a lot of red flags that came up about him."
New details on Roeder's ties to militia group
There were at least two dozen similar postings between August of 1995 and April of 1996.
Then, they suddenly stopped, right before Scott Roeder was pulled over for not having an official license plate...
... Metro News archives show that in early April, Shawnee County sheriff's were concerned the Freemen group might be planning something similar to the standoff that was happening at the same time between members of the Montana Freemen and the FBI.There was concern the Freemen had an attack planned for April 19th, the one year anniversary of the Oklahoma City Bombings.
Shawnee County law enforcement was put on heightened alert, and, less than a week later, on April 16th, Scott Roeder was arrested for having blasting caps and bomb making materials in his car.
Scott Roeder/Hutaree/Islamic Terrorist Groups.Brothers in arms?
The Faith-Based Militia: When is Terrorism ‘Christian’?
... In the ’90s, other terms were used to describe what we might now call Christian militias. The most famous militia group at the time, The Michigan Militia, had views similar to those of the Hutaree. It was founded and led by a Baptist minister named Norm Olsen and a deacon of his church, and they’d made an indoctrination video of its chaplain addressing new recruits explaining that abortion necessitated the founding of the militia. Nevertheless, it was typically described as “anti-government.” And while that was certainly fair, (as it would be to describe the Hutaree militia as anti-government), it also tended to obscure the indisputable religious motivations of this and many other militia groups large and small. Reporting on these groups at the time also tended to downplay their religious eschatology. ...
Tea Partying Militia Leader Arrested for Rape, Possessing a Grenade Launcher
A former Marine with ties to Tea Parties and militias who talked openly about using his training “to become a domestic terrorist” has been charged in separate complaints with raping a child and possessing an unregistered grenade launcher. His arrest may signal that a wing of the Tea Parties is heading in a more militant direction.
Charles Allan Dyer, 29, of Marlow, Oklahoma was arrested on January 12 at his home by Stephens County Sheriff’s deputies on the rape charge. The arrest occurred after a 7-year-old girl told sexual-abuse experts about a January 2nd incident at Dyer's home.
While sheriff's deputies were at Dyer's home, they found several firearms and a Colt M-203, 40-millimeter grenade launcher, according to court documents. When they searched a national crime database, the deputies discovered that the grenade launcher was one of three stolen from a military base at Fort Irwin, California, in 2006. According to an affidavit, Dyer told law enforcement that he had received the grenade launcher "from his best friend who gave it to him while Dyer was stationed in California with the Marine Corps" (United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma, Criminal Complaint, Case No. M-10-36-BA, January 14, 2010, pp. 2-3).
Dyer left the Marines last year after being brought up on charges of uttering "disloyal” statements, including his starring in several inflammatory YouTube videos which called for armed resistance against the U.S. government. In one video, Dyer exclaimed, "With DHS blatantly calling patriots, veterans, and constitutionalists a threat, all that I have to say is you’re damn right we're a threat. We're a threat to anyone that endangers our rights and the Constitution of this republic." He invited viewers to join him at his makeshift training area—"I'm sure the DHS will call it a terrorist training camp.”