From Michigan Department of Attorney General <[email protected]>
Subject Wolverine Watchmen Sentenced
Date December 15, 2022 6:53 PM
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*FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:*

December 15, 2022




*Media Contact:
*AG Press <[email protected]>






Wolverine Watchmen Sentenced





*LANSING – *Three members of the Wolverine Watchmen were sentenced to decades behind bars, Attorney General Dana Nessel announced today.   

Joseph Morrison, Paul Bellar and Pete Musico appeared before Judge Thomas Wilson of the 4th Circuit Court in Jackson County and were sentenced up to 20 years: 

Joseph Morrison, of Munith, was previously convicted of:   


* Gang membership, a 20-year felony that may be served as a consecutive sentence;  
* Providing material support for terrorist acts; and  
* Carrying or possessing a firearm during the commission of a felony; felony firearm – a two-year mandatory prison sentence to be served consecutively.   

Paul Bellar, of Milford, was previously convicted of:   


* Providing material support for terrorist acts, a 20-year felony and/or $20,000 fine;  
* Gang membership, a 20-year felony, which may be served as a consecutive sentence; and  
* Carrying or possessing a firearm during the commission of a felony; felony firearm – a two-year mandatory prison sentence to be served consecutively.  

Pete Musico, of Munith, was previously convicted of:  


* Gang membership, a 20-year felony that may be served as a consecutive sentence;  
* Providing material support for terrorist acts, a 20-year felony and/or $20,000 fine; and  
* Carrying or possessing a firearm during the commission of a felony; felony firearm – a two-year mandatory prison sentence to be served consecutively.  

“The defendants’ ultimate goals were to kill police and elected officials and kidnap the Governor of Michigan.  These extraordinarily violent ends, coupled with the unequivocal conviction from the jury, demand the maximum sentence,” said Nessel.  “Appropriate consequences for illegal acts are necessary to deter criminal behavior.  Law enforcement officers that put their lives on the line to protect our residents and communities, and those elected as part of our representative government, deserve to know those who threaten their safety will face the full penalty of the law.”   

Morrison, Bellar and Musico were charged under Michigan’s Anti-Terrorism Act of 2002.  They are three of several men that were arrested on domestic terrorism charges after a joint operation by state and federal authorities in early October 2020 [ [link removed] ]exposed a plot that included targeting law enforcement officers [ [link removed] ], threatening violence to incite a civil war, planning an attack on the state Capitol building and kidnapping government officials, including Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.  

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