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Home Front: WoT
Man arrested in Dearborn served time for threats against Bush
2011-02-01
Nope, not a Tea Party activist. Sorry Media Matters.
Dearborn — A decorated Army veteran accused of plotting to blow up a Metro Detroit mosque served time in federal prison for threatening to kill President George W. Bush and bomb a Vermont veterans' clinic in 2002.
Definitely coo-coo for cocoa-puffs.
Roger Stockham, 63, who flew 600 combat helicopter missions in Vietnam, is behind bars in Michigan after he drove from his home in California last week and parked a car with a trunk full of explosives outside the Islamic Center of America, authorities said.

Acting on a tip, Dearborn police thwarted the alleged plot by arresting Stockham outside the sprawling religious center, one of the largest mosques in North America. At the time, 500 members were attending a funeral at the mosque. Stockham had high-end fireworks outside the 70,000-square-foot mosque, which has a 150-foot dome height and 10-story-tall minarets, said Dearborn Mayor John B. O'Reilly Jr.

Stockham, who lives in Imperial Beach, Calif., is charged with one count of a false report or threat of terrorism and one count of explosives/possession of bombs with unlawful intent. He is being held on a $500,000 cash bond. He will be in court Friday for a hearing on the charges before 19th District Judge Mark Somers.
Perhaps this time they can do a psych evaluation and NOT release him after a year.
FBI special agent Sandra Berchtold confirmed Sunday the FBI is investigating the incident, which was referred to the federal agency by Dearborn police.

According to federal records, Stockham pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to federal charges stemming from the case in Vermont in 2004. That included threatening the president, mailing threatening communications, threatening by use of the telephone to use explosives, and threatening witnesses. A psychiatric examination found that Stockham suffered from bipolar disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder and personality disorder with anti-social features.

In the Vermont incident, he told authorities at the time of his arrest at a Veterans Affairs Department complex in Colchester that his minivan was full of explosives. A search found no explosives. Before the arrest, Stockham called a local paper twice to say he was going to explode bombs in the neighborhood. In one call, he identified himself as "Hem Ahadin," saying he was "a local Muslim terrorist on a roll."

He ranted against the VA, the FBI and Bush, largely because of the things the president had said about Iraq in a speech earlier in the week. According to affidavit filed in U.S. District Court, Stockham threatened to carry out "jihad," or holy war, against the VA office in White River, Vt.

In May 2005, a federal order of conditional release was issued for Stockham. It said the warden of the U.S. Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Miss., certified that Stockham had recovered from his mental disease and that his conditioned release under a regimen of treatments would not create a risk of bodily injury or harm to others.
I'm just guessing here but perhaps the 'regimen of treatments' broke down recently?
Just two weeks ago, Stockham was on Facebook, posting a rambling statement in which he again refers to himself as "Hem Ahadin," calling it his Muslim name.

Dawud Walid, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations' Michigan chapter, said he learned from police that Stockham had been drinking at a Detroit bar on Monday when he threatened to do harm to a mosque in Dearborn. A bar employee followed the man outside and wrote down his license plate number and called Detroit police, who in turn contacted authorities in Dearborn, Walid said.
A big attaboy to the bartender.
Dearborn police began searching around mosques in the city and found Stockham inside his vehicle outside the Islamic Center of America, Walid said, with a load of M-80s and other explosives in his trunk.

"We thank law enforcement authorities for their quick and professional actions in this troubling incident," Walid said. "The increased number of bias incidents targeting American Muslim institutions must be addressed by local, state and national officials and law enforcement authorities."

Investigators chose to keep the arrest quiet during the week while detectives determined whether Stockham was acting alone or with others, O'Reilly said. Police worked with the mosque's imam during the investigation, he said. O'Reilly said it appears Stockham was acting alone.
The rest of the article notes that he had trouble at his local VFW and that he was known as a 'nut'. No, really...
Posted by:Steve White

#8   I've seen more than a few bipolar disorders surface in mid-life,

I yield the argument to the man who knows more than I do.
Posted by: trailing wife   2011-02-01 17:23  

#7  I've seen more than a few bipolar disorders surface in mid-life, and I'm not a psychiatrist but a generalist. BPD is fairly common, although less common than regular depression. Mania &/or hypomania are essential parts of the diagnosis. If you've ever known someone in & out of mania, it is something to behold. One in particular had the reputation of walking as much as flying, being given particularly hairy, major and critical targets, because using him would guarantee that they would be obliterated, yet invariably, either enemy fire or flying debris would nail his helicopter. That pattern is consistent with hypomania, which can go on for many months at a time. I'm not saying the pilot referred to was ailing from anything, just that a hypomanic could very well function that way. With enough self-discipline a hypomanic can be hyperfunctional.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2011-02-01 15:30  

#6  A psychiatric examination found that Stockham suffered from bipolar disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder and personality disorder with anti-social features.

Bipolar symptoms don't usually wait until middle age to show up. That he flew through the highs and lows is to his credit. One doesn't like to lock people up, especially such a man, but it sounds like he can't remain stable on his own.
Posted by: trailing wife   2011-02-01 12:54  

#5  I've known several attack helicopter pilots who served in Vietnam, and they were a high intensity, high risk bunch, known for their derring-do. It is not surprising that a few of them later developed head problems.

One in particular had the reputation of walking as much as flying, being given particularly hairy, major and critical targets, because using him would guarantee that they would be obliterated, yet invariably, either enemy fire or flying debris would nail his helicopter.

Well worth the price of a helicopter. After the war he became an aircraft insurance claims adjuster.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2011-02-01 12:43  

#4  He probably saved a lot of young GI's by flying 600 helicopter missions in the Nam.
Posted by: bman   2011-02-01 12:18  

#3  Or going to the ammo dump for resupply.
Posted by: George Hupaviger4591   2011-02-01 09:39  

#2  Hmmm... in 1979, the article said he was a moslem convert.

Maybe he was trying to withdraw his 'conversion'.
Posted by: Bobby   2011-02-01 05:51  

#1  An article from 1979 about Stockham.
Posted by: tipper   2011-02-01 05:03  

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