United States v. Dennis M. McGiffen and Wallace S. Weicherding

267 F.3d 581
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 12, 2001
Docket98-3400, 98-4218 and 99-3797
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 267 F.3d 581 (United States v. Dennis M. McGiffen and Wallace S. Weicherding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Dennis M. McGiffen and Wallace S. Weicherding, 267 F.3d 581 (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge.

Dennis McGiffen and Wallace Weicherd-ing were members of a group of white supremacists in southern Illinois. After a lengthy undercover investigation by the FBI into the group’s activities, McGiffen, Weicherding, and two co-conspirators, Ralph Bock and Glenn Lowtharp, were charged in a one-count indictment with conspiracy to receive and possess unregistered firearms and destructive devices in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. McGiffen was also charged in a separate one-count information with possession of a machine gun in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(o). He pleaded guilty to both charges and received concurrent sentences of 60 and 87 months; his appeal is limited to sentencing issues. Weicherding ultimately faced both the conspiracy charge and the machine gun charge under a two-count superseding indictment. He went to trial, where the jury convicted him on both counts; the court sentenced him to concurrent 60 and 70 month sentences. Weicherding’s appeal attacks both his conviction and his sentence. We affirm in McGiffen’s case, and we affirm Weicherding’s conviction, *584 but we remand for further proceedings directed to Weicherding’s sentence.

I

The following account is drawn from the record in both cases, including Weicherd-ing’s jury trial; we view the facts in the light most favorable to the government. United States v. Wingate, 128 F.3d 1157, 1158 (7th Cir.1997). In May of 1997, Vincent Reed contacted the FBI to report that some of his acquaintances, including McGiffen and Weicherding, were forming a new, potentially dangerous, white supremacist group in southern Illinois. According to Reed, the group hoped to pick up where “The Order” (a notoriously violent white supremacist organization active in the early 1980s) had left off, uniting white supremacist groups in a violent struggle against those who would resist the creation of a “pure white Christian country.” This new group called itself, appropriately enough, the “New Order.”

The FBI enlisted Reed as a paid informant charged with infiltrating the emerging New Order. Through Reed’s surveillance, the FBI learned that McGif-fen, already a Grand Dragon in the Illinois Ku Klux Klan (KKK), was the group’s leader. McGiffen worked hard to build the new organization. He recruited and “naturalized” new members (a ritual that included swearing an oath and acquiring a distinctive tattoo) and regularly used both persuasion and force to maintain members’ allegiance to the group. He organized and ran the meetings at which members made plans to acquire the money and weaponry they would need to pursue the New Order’s militant racist agenda. Last, McGiffen parceled out tasks to the group’s various members.

The New Order intended to raise money by robbing banks and armored cars. With those funds, it would then acquire a stockpile of firearms and explosives. The group was particularly interested in building a supply of fully-automatic weapons, which were valuable both for their destructive capabilities and as a source of revenue. McGiffen instructed Weicherding, a member of both the Aryan Nations and the KKK, to conduct surveillance on armored trucks and banks. Reed was assigned to get false identification for New Order members, and McGiffen gave himself and Bock the task of coordinating the acquisition of weapons and explosives.

Weicherding did as he was told. He cased banks and discussed with Reed the specifics of carrying out the first robbery. He also joined McGiffen in the weapons acquisition effort. By June 20, 1997, they had purchased a TEC-9 pistol and gunpowder for use in homemade grenades. On August 28, 1997, Weicherding, Reed, and McGiffen drove together to the home of Ralph Bock to acquire additional firearms. While in the car, they discussed the fact that they were now in possession of a LAWS Rocket (supplied by Reed after it was disabled by the FBI) and dynamite. During that conversation they also discussed their plans to convert semi-automatic weapons into fully-automatic weapons with the help of Glen Lowtharp, a white supremacist ally with expertise in such things.

On November 8, 1997, Weicherding and McGiffen went to visit Lowtharp, bringing with them two weapons they wanted to convert from semi- to fully-automatic. The three men then proceeded to Low-tharp’s sister’s house to pick up the parts they needed to complete the conversions and then to his nephew’s place to get an AR-15 assault rifle. The next morning, McGiffen and Lowtharp converted the AR-15 rifle to a fully-automatic weapon, using a machine gun hammer, a machine *585 gun trigger, a machine gun disconnector, and a machine gun selector. Weicherding, who had received weapons training during a stint as a prison guard for the Illinois Department of Corrections, watched as the others worked. In tests later conducted by a government expert, the AR 15 fired multiple rounds from its clip with a single pull of the trigger.

With the converted AR-15 in hand, McGiffen and Weicherding left Lowtharp’s house with the other two guns they had brought along; they told Lowtharp they planned to use the AR-15 as a model for converting other firearms to “full auto.” They also left with “how to” literature about weapons conversion, which specifically warned that “the mere possession of a part or parts which convert a weapon to full auto is illegal without prior [Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, or BATF] approval.” Later, Weicherding again approached Lowtharp to see if he had acquired any additional machine gun parts the group could use for further conversions.

As the New Order’s weapons acquisition activities progressed, its ambitions grew. Members discussed possible assaults on Morris Dees and the Southern Poverty Law Center, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, and a host of other targets. They discussed expanding their organization nationwide and disabling the country’s communications infrastructure. At the same time, the growing stockpile of weapons increased McGiffen’s concern that law enforcement authorities might get wind of the group’s activities. At a meeting at his house, group members, including Weicherding and Reed, were strip-searched for wires, and McGiffen proposed that future telephone conversations be conducted in code — the word “bibles,” for example, became code for automatic weapons. Anxiety grew to the point that when McGiffen learned that New Order member Jeff Schmitz told his mother about the group’s plans, he stuck a gun to Schmitz’s stomach and threatened to kill him and his children if he opened his mouth again.

During January and February of 1998, McGiffen, Weicherding, and other members of the New Order began in earnest to plan their first violent act: the destruction of Morris Dees and the Southern Poverty Law Center. Weicherding took a trip to Atlanta to assess the vulnerability of the center itself and, more ominously, five days after discussing the possibility of assassinating Dees, he took a revolver and drove an hour to attend a speech by Dees at Southern Illinois University in Ed-wardsville.

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Bluebook (online)
267 F.3d 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-dennis-m-mcgiffen-and-wallace-s-weicherding-ca7-2001.