Documents from an Ohio National Guard (ONG) training
drill conducted last January reveal the details of a mock disaster where Second
Amendment supporters with “anti-government” opinions were portrayed as domestic
terrorists.
The ONG 52nd Civil Support Team training
scenario involved a plot from local school district employees to use biological
weapons in order to advance their beliefs about “protecting Gun Rights and
Second Amendment rights.”
Portsmouth Fire Chief Bill Raison told NBC
3 WSAZ-TV in Huntington, West Virginia that the drill accurately
represented “the reality of the world we live in,” adding that such training
“helps us all be prepared.”
Internal ONG documents provided to Media
Trackers after repeated delays provide further context to what WSAZ-TV reported
last winter.
In the disaster-preparedness scenario, two
Portsmouth Junior High School employees poisoned school lunches with mustard
gas, acting on orders from white-nationalist leader William Pierce.
The ONG team discovered biological weapons being
produced in the school, requiring activation of containment and decontamination
procedures.
Participants in the disaster drill located documents
expressing the school employees’ “anti-government” sentiments, as well as a
note identifying Pierce as the fictional right-wing terrorists’ leader.
ONG’s 52nd Civil Support Unit participated in a
similar drill involving left-wing terrorists with Athens County first
responders last year; public officials apologized for that training the
next day in response to complaints from local environmentalist groups.
No apology to Ohioans who support limited government
and the Second Amendment appears to be forthcoming.
Scioto County Emergency Management Agency director
Kim Carver refused to comment, telling Media Trackers she was “not going to get
into an Ohio Army National Guard issue that you have with them.”
Ohio National Guard Communications Director James
Sims II suggested Media Trackers was “inferring” from the ONG document’s
contents as opposed to “what’s actually in the report.”
After excerpts of the report were read to him, Sims
said it was “not relevant” to understand why conservatives may feel unduly
targeted by ONG’s training scenario.
“Okay, I’m gonna stop ya there. I’m going to quit
this conversation,” Sims concluded. “You have a good day.”
Buckeye Firearms Association spokesman Chad Baus
told Media Trackers that “it is a scary day indeed when law enforcement are
being trained that Second Amendment advocates are the enemy.”
“The revelation of this information is appalling to
me, and to all citizens of Ohio who are true conservatives and patriots, who
don’t have guns for any other reason than that the Second Amendment gives them
that right,” Portage County TEA Party Executive Director Tom Zawistowski said
in a separate Media Trackers interview.
Media Trackers reached out to Portsmouth-area state
legislators Representative Terry Johnson and Senator Joe Uecker for comment
about the drill, which took place within their respective districts. Neither
replied to phone calls or emails in time for publication.
ONG’s January 2013 training exercise is one of many
instances where government officials have identified those with
limited-government or pro-Second Amendment opinions as potential terror
threats.
In 2009, the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security warned law enforcement agencies that a predicted rise
in“right-wing extremism” would be fueled by “proposed imposition of firearms
restrictions and weapons bans” and “the election of the first African American
president.”
Throughout modern history, groups and individuals
associated with left-wing causes have proven far more likely to commit acts of
domestic terror.
In 2012, members of the anarcho-socialist Occupy
Cleveland movement were arrested and prosecuted for attempting to destroy the
Brecksville-Northfield High Level Bridge with explosives, to commemorate
International Workers’ Day.
Last year, leftist groups Earth First and the Animal
Liberation Front (ALF) claimed responsibility for the sabotage and property
destruction of businesses in Washington and Van Wert counties.
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