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Sentencing for Y-12 protesters now consolidated, starts later Tuesday afternoon

Posted at 10:25 am February 18, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Y-12 Plowshares Protesters

Pictured above are the three anti-nuclear weapons protesters who broke into the Y-12 National Security Complex on July 28, 2012, and vandalized a uranium storage building. From left, they are Michael Walli, Megan Rice, and Greg Boertje-Obed.

A federal judge has delayed for about an hour the Tuesday afternoon sentencing hearing for the three anti-nuclear weapons activists who cut through high-security fences and splashed human blood and spray-painted slogans on a uranium storage building at the Y-12 National Security Complex in July 2012.

The three protesters—Greg Boertje-Obed, Megan Rice, and Michael Walli—had originally been scheduled to have separate hearings starting at noon today (Tuesday) and continuing through 4 p.m. But in an order filed Tuesday morning, U.S. District Judge Amul R. Thapar said he would consolidate some aspects of the court’s analysis and allow all three defendants to remain in the courtroom during all three sentencing hearings.

The joint sentencing hearing will now start at 1:30 p.m. today (Tuesday) in U.S. District Court in Knoxville.

An earlier consolidated sentencing hearing on Jan. 28 was delayed due to snow. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Top Stories, Y-12 National Security Complex, Y-12 Security Breach Tagged With: Amul R. Thapar, Greg Boertje-Obed, Manhattan Project, Megan Rice, Michael Walli, security breach, sentencing hearing, Transform Now Plowshares, U.S. District Court, Y-12 National Security Complex

Y-12 protesters to be sentenced in three hearings Tuesday

Posted at 2:26 pm February 14, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The Fruit of Justice is Peace Slogan on HEUMF at Y-12

Three anti-nuclear weapons activists who sneaked into the Y-12 National Security Complex on July 28, 2012, splashed human blood and, quoting Proverbs, sprayed paint on the Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility. The protesters also hammered the building, causing it to chip, and strung up crime scene tape. (Submitted photo)

The three anti-nuclear weapons activists who cut through high-security fences and splashed human blood and spray-painted slogans on the side of a uranium storage building at the Y-12 National Security Complex in July 2012 will be sentenced in three separate hearings in Knoxville on Tuesday.

Their earlier consolidated sentencing hearing on Jan. 28 was delayed due to snow.

U.S. District Judge Amul R. Thapar has ordered that Michael Walli, a 64-year-old Catholic worker from Washington, D.C., be sentenced at 12 p.m. Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Knoxville. Walli is facing the longest potential sentence, a range of about seven to nine years, for the damage caused during the unprecedented security breach.

Greg Boertje-Obed, a 58-year-old painter from Duluth, Minn., will be sentenced next, at 2 p.m. His recommended sentence is roughly six to eight years. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Slider, Top Stories, Y-12, Y-12 National Security Complex, Y-12 Security Breach Tagged With: Amul R. Thapar, Greg Boertje-Obed, Megan Rice, Michael Walli, security breach, sentencing, Transform Now Plowshares, U.S. District Court, Y-12 National Security Complex, Y-12 protesters

Clinton police contribute to arrests on federal charges after Burger King robbery

Posted at 5:20 pm February 6, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Two Lenoir City residents face federal charges for their roles in a Jan. 30 robbery of a Burger King in Lenoir City, and the Clinton Police Department contributed to the arrests, federal officials said Thursday.

In a press release, U.S. Attorney William C. Killian said Joshua Hayworth, 23, and Timothy E. Chudley, 35, both of Lenoir City, were charged Feb. 5 with federal Hobbs Act violations for their roles in the January robbery of the Burger King restaurant in Lenoir City.

Chudley was arrested in Knoxville on Feb. 5 without incident, and he appeared in federal court the same day, the press release said. Hayworth was arrested on state charges on Feb. 3 following a series of events which also resulted in federal carjacking charges against Hayworth. He will appear in federal court at a later date. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Clinton, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Bob Gray Road, Burger King, Burger King robbery, carjacking, Clinton Police Department, FBI, FBI Safe Streets Task Force, federal charges, Hobbs Act, Joshua Hayworth, KCSO, Knox County Sheriff’s Department, Knoxville Police Department, KPD, Lenoir City, Lenoir City Police Department, Loudon County Sheriff’s Office, robbery, Timothy E. Chudley, U.S. Attorney, U.S. District Court, William C. Killian

Judge says Y-12 protesters not contrite as snow delays sentencing

Posted at 1:06 pm January 29, 2014
By John Huotari 5 Comments

Y-12 Plowshares Protesters

Pictured above are the three anti-nuclear weapons protesters who broke into the Y-12 National Security Complex on July 28, 2012, and vandalized a uranium storage building. From left, they are Michael Walli, Megan Rice, and Greg Boertje-Obed.

KNOXVILLE—The three protesters who cut through fences and vandalized a uranium storage building at the Y-12 National Security Complex in July 2012 have not shown contrition or accepted responsibility for what they’ve done, a federal judge said during a Tuesday sentencing hearing.

The three anti-nuclear weapons activists—Greg Boertje-Obed, Megan Rice, and Michael R. Walli—have acknowledged that they splashed human blood, hung crime scene tape, and hammered on the side of the Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility on July 28, 2012. They have freely given interviews to reporters and admitted that they spray-painted slogans—they called them “Biblical graffiti”—on the side of the HEUMF, which stores most of the nation’s bomb-grade uranium.

But acknowledging their actions is not the same as contrition, U.S. District Judge Amul R. Thapar suggested during a Tuesday sentencing hearing at the Howard H. Baker Jr. Courthouse in Knoxville. To accept responsibility, the trio would have to show contrition and remorse, and acknowledge that what they did was wrong, Thapar said.

However, the defendants have fought the government at every step in the 18-month-old case, the judge said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, National Nuclear Security Administration, Slider, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy, Y-12, Y-12 National Security Complex, Y-12 Security Breach Tagged With: Amul R. Thapar, Andy Anderson, B&W Y-12, Bill Quigley, Chrissy Nesbitt, civil disobedience, Greg Boertje-Obed, HEUMF, Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility, Howard H. Baker Jr. Courthouse, Jeffrey E. Theodore, Megan Rice, Michael R. Walli, Michele Naar-Obed, National Nuclear Security Administration, NNSA, nuclear weapons, protesters, restitution, Rodney L. Johnson, security breach, sentencing, Transform Now Plowshares, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. District Court, uranium, WSI Oak Ridge, Y-12 National Security Complex, Y-12 protesters

Y-12 sentencing hearing delayed due to snow

Posted at 3:41 pm January 28, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Y-12 Sentencing Hearing

Snow delayed the Tuesday afternoon sentencing for the three anti-nuclear weapons activists who cut through fences and vandalized a uranium storage building at the Y-12 National Security Complex in July 2012. Above, supporters, attorneys, and reporters leave U.S. District Court in Knoxville.

KNOXVILLE—Snow delayed the Tuesday afternoon sentencing for the three anti-nuclear weapons activists who cut through fences and vandalized a uranium storage building at the Y-12 National Security Complex in July 2012.

The hearing could be moved to 9 a.m. Feb. 18. But there is also a possibility that U.S. District Judge Amul Thapar, who normally hears cases in the Eastern District of Kentucky, could resume the hearing on Wednesday.

The sentencing hearing for the three protesters—Greg Boertje-Obed, Megan Rice, and Michael Walli—was at the Howard H. Baker Jr. Courthouse in Knoxville, which closed early at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday because of the snow and driving conditions. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Government, Slider, Top Stories, Y-12 National Security Complex, Y-12 Security Breach Tagged With: Amul Thapar, Greg Boertje-Obed, Megan Rice, Michael Walli, security breach, U.S. District Court, Y-12 National Security Complex

Y-12 protesters to be sentenced Tuesday morning

Posted at 2:35 am January 28, 2014
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Y-12 Plowshares Protesters

Pictured above are the three anti-nuclear weapons protesters who broke into the Y-12 National Security Complex on July 28, 2012. From left, they are Michael Walli, Megan Rice, and Greg Boertje-Obed.

The three protesters convicted on federal charges after sneaking into the Y-12 National Security Complex and splashing human blood and spray-painting slogans on a uranium storage building in July 2012 will be sentenced in U.S. District Court in Knoxville on Tuesday morning.

The sentencing hearing for the three anti-nuclear weapons activists—Greg Boertje-Obed, Megan Rice, and Michael R. Walli—is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. Tuesday. The defendants will be sentenced individually after a joint hearing to hear witness testimony and objections to a pre-sentence report.

The government plans to call retired Brig. Gen. Rodney L. Johnson as a witness. He testified at the two-day trial in May, and he is the senior vice president and deputy general manager of security operations and emergency services at Y-12.

A Catholic nun, house painter, and laborer, Boertje-Obed, Rice, and Walli were convicted in May 2013 of destroying U.S. property and attempting to injure national defense premises. They acknowledged sneaking into Y-12 before dawn on July 28, 2012, and cutting through three fences in a high-security Protected Area before vandalizing the Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility, where most of the nation’s bomb-grade uranium is stored. But they said their unprecedented intrusion was peaceful, religiously motivated, and nonviolent, a symbolic disarming of Y-12. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Slider, Top Stories, Y-12, Y-12 National Security Complex, Y-12 Security Breach Tagged With: bomb-grade uranium, Greg Boertje-Obed, Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility, Megan Rice, Michael R. Walli, nuclear operations, security breach, sentencing hearing, U.S. District Court, uranium storage, Y-12 National Security Complex, Y-12 protesters

Feds, local law enforcement dismantle $17.5 million cocaine trafficking ring

Posted at 5:18 pm December 12, 2013
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Federal officials on Thursday announced they had dismantled a Knoxville-based cocaine ring that is accused of trafficking $17.5 million worth of drugs and distributing more than five kilograms of cocaine and 280 grams of crack cocaine.

A federal grand jury returned a 58-count indictment on Dec. 3 against 21 Knoxville residents, charging them with conspiracy to distribute cocaine and cocaine base, money laundering, and gun charges, U.S. Attorney William C. Killian said in a press release.

The 21 members of the alleged drug ring appeared in court before U.S. magistrate judges this week and entered pleas of not guilty to the charges in the indictment, Killian said. All of them have been ordered held without bond pending trial, which has been set for Feb. 11 in U.S. District Court in Knoxville.

Among the law enforcement agencies participating in the investigation were the Anderson County Sheriff’s Department, Clinton Police Department, Oak Ridge Police Department, and Roane County Sheriff’s Department, Killian said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Clinton Police Department, cocaine, cocaine ring, cocaine trafficking, cocaine trafficking ring, conspiracy to distribute cocaine and cocaine base, crack cocaine, drug ring, Eastern District of Tennessee, gun charges, money laundering, Oak Ridge Police Department, Roane County Sheriff's Department, U.S. Attorneys' Office, U.S. District Court, William C. Killian

Son convicted of drug charges inside courtroom, father arrested outside

Posted at 2:46 pm September 9, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

William Charles Braden

William Charles Braden

Betty Jo Braden

Betty Jo Braden

After his son was convicted inside a federal courthouse in Knoxville on drug charges last week, a Lake City man was arrested outside, charged with selling a controlled substance, authorities said.

The mother was also arrested on drug charges, but she was at home on Vowell Mountain Lane near Lake City when she was picked up, authorities said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Criminal Court, Anderson County Sheriff, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Betty Jo Braden, controlled substance, Jeffrey Scott Braden, Lake City, meth, methamphetamine, Paul White, Percocet, sale of a controlled substance, Special Operations Unit, U.S. Attorneys' Office, U.S. District Court, Vowell Mountain Lane, William Charles Braden

Lake City man convicted of conspiracy to make 50+ grams of meth

Posted at 3:05 pm September 6, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Jeffery Scott Braden

Jeffery Scott Braden

He was the only one of 42 people indicted earlier this year to go to trial in an unprecedented meth-making conspiracy, and now the Lake City man has been found guilty, authorities said Friday.

After a three-day federal trial, a jury convicted Jeffrey Scott Braden of conspiracy to manufacture 50 grams or more of methamphetamine; the possession of equipment, chemicals, products, and materials that can be used to make it; and being a felon in possession of ammunition, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said. Braden was tried in U.S. District Court in Knoxville. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Federal, Government, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, conspiracy, conspiracy to manufacture 50 grams or more of methamphetamine, David P. Lewen Jr., Drug Enforcement Administration, Eastern District of Tennessee, indictment, Jeffrey Scott Braden, meth, meth lab, methamphetamine, Operation Meth-odical Destruction, possession of ammunition by a previously convicted felon, possession of equipment chemicals products materials that may be used to manufacture methamphetamine, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Thomas A. Varlan, U.S. Attorneys' Office, U.S. District Court, William C. Killian

Former TVA executive pleads guilty to unlawful investments in Iran, filing false tax returns

Posted at 5:44 pm September 4, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

A former Tennessee Valley Authority executive pleaded guilty Wednesday to unlawful financial investments in Iran and filing false tax returns, federal officials said.

Former TVA Vice President Masoud Bajestani, 58, formerly of Chattanooga, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, and Iranian Transactions Regulations, and two counts of filing false income tax returns, said U.S. Attorney William C. Killian of the Eastern District of Tennessee. Bajestani also agreed to forfeit $600,000 in U.S. currency, representing the funds used to promote the specified unlawful activity, Killian said.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: conspiracy to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, Eastern District of Tennessee, false tax returns, Federal Bureau of Investigation, filing false income tax returns, Homeland Security Investigations, IEEPA, Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigations Division, Iran, Iranian Transactions Regulations, Jeffrey Thedore, Leon Jordan, Masoud Bajestani, Tennessee Valley Authority, Tennessee Valley Authority-Office of Inspector General, TVA, U.S. District Court, unlawful financial investments, William C. Killian

Woman alleges excessive force, brutality at jail; files $17.6 million lawsuit

Posted at 12:36 am September 4, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

A multi-million dollar federal lawsuit filed last month and amended Tuesday alleges an Anderson County woman with multiple sclerosis was sprayed with chemical spray in the face and eyes at least twice while restrained and had her forehead slammed into a cement wall after she was arrested for public intoxication at her home earlier this year.

The lawsuit seeks $17.6 million for Heather Bolling, 30. She accused Anderson County jailers of using excessive force and brutality, and she alleged she was severely and permanently injured after she was arrested on Oak Road near Norris on April 28 and taken to the Anderson County Detention Facility in Clinton. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Federal, Government, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Detention Facility, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Arthur F. Knight III, assault, audio, battery, brutality, chemical spray, conspiracy, excessive force, George T. Underwood Jr., Heather Bolling, infliction of emotional distress, lawsuit, multiple sclerosis, Oak Road, Paul White, special needs, spoiling evidence, U.S. District Court, video

Y-12 protester temporarily released for funeral; officials don’t comment on whether she returned to prison

Posted at 2:50 pm July 31, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Megan Rice and Michele Naar-Obed

Megan Rice, left, was convicted on two federal charges in May after breaking into the Y-12 National Security Complex on July 28, 2012, and vandalizing a uranium storage building with two other protesters. She was temporarily released last week to attend her brother-in-law’s funeral. Rice is pictured above outside U.S. District Court in Knoxville with Michele Naar-Obed, wife of one of the other protesters, Greg Boertje-Obed.

U.S. and Georgia officials did not respond to requests for comment on Tuesday and Wednesday on whether peace protester Megan Rice, who has been convicted of destroying government property at the Y-12 National Security Complex, returned to prison in the Peach State this week after a five-day release to attend the funeral of her brother-in-law in New York.

But on Tuesday, Ralph Hutchison, coordinator of the Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, said he assumed Rice had returned to the Irwin County Detention Center in Ocilla, Ga.

“I assume she reported, or we’d have heard from someone trying to locate her,” Hutchison said in a Tuesday evening e-mail. “I know she was returning to Atlanta last night en route to Ocilla. That’s the last I heard.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Police and Fire, Top Stories, Y-12 National Security Complex, Y-12 Security Breach Tagged With: Amul Thapar, C. Clifford Shirley Jr., Georgia Department of Corrections, Greg Boertje-Obed, Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility, Irwin County Detention Center, Megan Rice, Michael Walli, Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, peace protester, Peter Finnerty Sr., Ralph Hutchison, U.S. District Court, U.S. Marshals Service, Y-12 National Security Complex

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Classifieds

Availability of the draft environmental assessment for off-site depleted uranium manufacturing (DOE/EA-2252)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the … [Read More...]

Public Notice: NNSA announces no significant impact of Y-12 Development Organization operations at Horizon Center

AVAILABILITY OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OFFSITE HOUSING OF THE Y-12 DEVELOPMENT … [Read More...]

ADFAC seeks contractors for five homes

Aid to Distressed Families of Appalachian Counties (ADFAC) is a non-profit community based agency, … [Read More...]

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