News (Media Awareness Project) - US IN: FBI Agent Kills Rainbow Farm Owner |
Title: | US IN: FBI Agent Kills Rainbow Farm Owner |
Published On: | 2001-09-03 |
Source: | South Bend Tribune (IN) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 09:01:54 |
FBI AGENT KILLS RAINBOW FARM OWNER
VANDALIA -- Grover T. "Tom" Crosslin's standoff came to a deadly end Monday.
The 47-year-old owner of Rainbow Farm Campground was fatally shot by an FBI
agent about 4:40 p.m. EDT Monday, according to Cass County Sheriff Joseph
Underwood.
It was a grim ending for supporters of Crosslin, an advocate of marijuana
legalization and personal rights, who was shot and killed on the perimeter
of his 34-acre farm and establishment at 59896 Pemberton Road in Newberg
Township.
The shooting occurred on the fourth day of the standoff that had pitted
Crosslin and two others -- Brandon James Peoples, whose age and address
were unavailable, and Rolland Rohm, 28, of Vandalia -- against the Cass
County Sheriff's Department, Michigan State Police and the Federal Bureau
of Investigation.
The FBI had joined Cass County Sheriff's deputies and Michigan State Police
on Sunday.
Underwood said Monday night at a police staging area about a mile from the
farm that Crosslin had been shot and killed by an FBI agent whom he did not
identify. Although Underwood said the shooting occurred Monday afternoon,
he didn't make the announcement until about 10:15 p.m. EDT.
As a result, Crosslin's supporters, some of whom had gathered only a short
distance away from the staging area, weren't aware he had been killed until
they watched it on the evening TV news or heard it on the radio. When
hearing the news, some screamed "murderers!"
"This deal has hurt a lot of people ... a lot of people," said Geary
Albright, an Elkhart resident and boyfriend of Crosslin's sister, Shirley
DeWeese.
The sheriff said efforts to negotiate directly with Crosslin to end the
impasse looked promising Monday afternoon after he was given a telephone at
his residence on the farm.
But Underwood said Crosslin asked to speak with a third party at the outset
of the negotiation, and he became enraged when authorities denied his request.
He said Crosslin "made threatening remarks and gestures'' before he
terminated all efforts to negotiate and left the house with a rifle
accompanied by Peoples. Upon leaving the house, Crosslin and Peoples were
observed walking the perimeter of the residence with the weapon.
"They approached an area where an FBI observer had been stationed, and upon
seeing the FBI observer, Crosslin immediately raised the weapon to shoulder
height and pointed it directly at the agent,'' Underwood said.
"At that moment, the FBI observer fired one round and fatally wounded
Crosslin, with Brandon Peoples receiving minor injuries.''
Peoples was slightly injured during the incident, and was immediately
grabbed by authorities on site.
Rohm remained on the farm, and was still there negotiating with authorities
early today.
It wasn't immediately clear whether Peoples would be charged with any
crimes in the four-day standoff. Underwood said agents were still
negotiating with Rohm for his possible surrender late Monday.
Earlier Monday, supporters of Crosslin said they anticipated a violent end
to the standoff, which began Friday when Crosslin allegedly torched two
buildings on his property.
"He's (Crosslin) not going to give up. I know he won't,'' said Morel
"Moses'' Yonkers, of Elkhart. "I worked for him for 10 years. Trust me. I
know.''
Yonkers was among more than a dozen supporters of Crosslin at a makeshift
campsite at Michigan 60 and White Temple Road, about two miles from the farm.
"I don't think he'll leave alive,'' said Tommy Friend, a Cassopolis
resident and an acquaintance of Crosslin who worked and stayed at his farm
for two weeks.
Albright had spoken earlier Monday as if he clearly anticipated a tragic
outcome.
"I wish it hadn't come down to this. He's done a lot of good things for
people,'' Albright said. "He's a good man.''
Crosslin's father, Grover Crosslin, also of Vandalia, argued his son was
non-violent, but stubborn.
"If he believes in something, he's going to carry it through,'' he said.
"This is about property rights .... It's enough to cause a war.''
Crosslin advocated the legalization of marijuana. A Web site established by
Crosslin after he purchased his farm and campground about 15 years ago
touts "the medical, spiritual and responsible recreational use of marijuana
for a more sane and compassionate America.''
A former Elkhart resident, he had a varied work life that ranged from
driving trucks and installing flagpoles to remodeling houses.
He was a history buff, buying a brick house built in 1807 that had once
been a stop on the Underground Railroad with plans to turn it into a
bed-and-breakfast. And he was a staunch civil libertarian, having painted a
Elkhart house on Dr. King Drive neon peach and lime green as part of a
dispute with city officials over building code enforcement standards.
Vandalia Mayor Sondra Mose-Ursery said she knew Crosslin well and wasn't
surprised by his confrontation with authorities.
"I figured it was going to happen, by the way he had talked about not
wanting to go to jail for (doing) something he believed in,'' she said. "He
believes he should be able to do what he wants on his own property.''
She said she met Crosslin several years ago when he spent $2,000 on
Christmas gifts for children in the village of Vandalia.
All seemed well for Crosslin until May.
That was when things began falling apart for the former Elkhart resident,
who was arrested in May on drug charges.
He was scheduled to appear in court Friday for a hearing to revoke his
$150,000 bond. But instead he skipped the hearing and then allegedly set
fire to buildings on his property, which he had stood to lose under the
state's Drug Forfeiture Act.
Police said an anonymous telephone caller told them the fires were set "to
ambush law enforcement officers when they arrived in response to the fire.''
It's believed Crosslin, Rohm or Peoples or a combination of the three also
fired shots at three aircraft that flew over the property. One of the
aircraft, a helicopter used by WNDU-TV, Channel 16, South Bend, was damaged.
On Monday, Crosslin had federal charges levied against him, resulting in
the dispatch of FBI agents and a federal warrant against Crosslin on
charges of attempted destruction of an aircraft and using a firearm to
commit a felony. He was facing up to 30 years in prison if convicted of those.
On the state criminal counts, Crosslin was charged with manufacturing
marijuana, more than 200 plants, a 15-year felony; maintaining a drug
house, a two-year misdemeanor; felony firearm, a two-year felony; and
possession of a firearm by a felon, a five-year felony.
Underwood said the show-cause petition and motion to revoke $150,000 bond
for Crosslin grew out of a festival that was staged at the farm and
campground Aug. 17 and 18.
He said bond conditions specified no such activity was to take place at the
farm, based on drug activities that allegedly took place at the events.
Two more buildings were burned on the farm and campground, reportedly on
Saturday. Underwood said the fires were set by Crosslin and not law
enforcement.
Rohm is charged with manufacturing marijuana, maintaining a drug house, and
felony firearm.
VANDALIA -- Grover T. "Tom" Crosslin's standoff came to a deadly end Monday.
The 47-year-old owner of Rainbow Farm Campground was fatally shot by an FBI
agent about 4:40 p.m. EDT Monday, according to Cass County Sheriff Joseph
Underwood.
It was a grim ending for supporters of Crosslin, an advocate of marijuana
legalization and personal rights, who was shot and killed on the perimeter
of his 34-acre farm and establishment at 59896 Pemberton Road in Newberg
Township.
The shooting occurred on the fourth day of the standoff that had pitted
Crosslin and two others -- Brandon James Peoples, whose age and address
were unavailable, and Rolland Rohm, 28, of Vandalia -- against the Cass
County Sheriff's Department, Michigan State Police and the Federal Bureau
of Investigation.
The FBI had joined Cass County Sheriff's deputies and Michigan State Police
on Sunday.
Underwood said Monday night at a police staging area about a mile from the
farm that Crosslin had been shot and killed by an FBI agent whom he did not
identify. Although Underwood said the shooting occurred Monday afternoon,
he didn't make the announcement until about 10:15 p.m. EDT.
As a result, Crosslin's supporters, some of whom had gathered only a short
distance away from the staging area, weren't aware he had been killed until
they watched it on the evening TV news or heard it on the radio. When
hearing the news, some screamed "murderers!"
"This deal has hurt a lot of people ... a lot of people," said Geary
Albright, an Elkhart resident and boyfriend of Crosslin's sister, Shirley
DeWeese.
The sheriff said efforts to negotiate directly with Crosslin to end the
impasse looked promising Monday afternoon after he was given a telephone at
his residence on the farm.
But Underwood said Crosslin asked to speak with a third party at the outset
of the negotiation, and he became enraged when authorities denied his request.
He said Crosslin "made threatening remarks and gestures'' before he
terminated all efforts to negotiate and left the house with a rifle
accompanied by Peoples. Upon leaving the house, Crosslin and Peoples were
observed walking the perimeter of the residence with the weapon.
"They approached an area where an FBI observer had been stationed, and upon
seeing the FBI observer, Crosslin immediately raised the weapon to shoulder
height and pointed it directly at the agent,'' Underwood said.
"At that moment, the FBI observer fired one round and fatally wounded
Crosslin, with Brandon Peoples receiving minor injuries.''
Peoples was slightly injured during the incident, and was immediately
grabbed by authorities on site.
Rohm remained on the farm, and was still there negotiating with authorities
early today.
It wasn't immediately clear whether Peoples would be charged with any
crimes in the four-day standoff. Underwood said agents were still
negotiating with Rohm for his possible surrender late Monday.
Earlier Monday, supporters of Crosslin said they anticipated a violent end
to the standoff, which began Friday when Crosslin allegedly torched two
buildings on his property.
"He's (Crosslin) not going to give up. I know he won't,'' said Morel
"Moses'' Yonkers, of Elkhart. "I worked for him for 10 years. Trust me. I
know.''
Yonkers was among more than a dozen supporters of Crosslin at a makeshift
campsite at Michigan 60 and White Temple Road, about two miles from the farm.
"I don't think he'll leave alive,'' said Tommy Friend, a Cassopolis
resident and an acquaintance of Crosslin who worked and stayed at his farm
for two weeks.
Albright had spoken earlier Monday as if he clearly anticipated a tragic
outcome.
"I wish it hadn't come down to this. He's done a lot of good things for
people,'' Albright said. "He's a good man.''
Crosslin's father, Grover Crosslin, also of Vandalia, argued his son was
non-violent, but stubborn.
"If he believes in something, he's going to carry it through,'' he said.
"This is about property rights .... It's enough to cause a war.''
Crosslin advocated the legalization of marijuana. A Web site established by
Crosslin after he purchased his farm and campground about 15 years ago
touts "the medical, spiritual and responsible recreational use of marijuana
for a more sane and compassionate America.''
A former Elkhart resident, he had a varied work life that ranged from
driving trucks and installing flagpoles to remodeling houses.
He was a history buff, buying a brick house built in 1807 that had once
been a stop on the Underground Railroad with plans to turn it into a
bed-and-breakfast. And he was a staunch civil libertarian, having painted a
Elkhart house on Dr. King Drive neon peach and lime green as part of a
dispute with city officials over building code enforcement standards.
Vandalia Mayor Sondra Mose-Ursery said she knew Crosslin well and wasn't
surprised by his confrontation with authorities.
"I figured it was going to happen, by the way he had talked about not
wanting to go to jail for (doing) something he believed in,'' she said. "He
believes he should be able to do what he wants on his own property.''
She said she met Crosslin several years ago when he spent $2,000 on
Christmas gifts for children in the village of Vandalia.
All seemed well for Crosslin until May.
That was when things began falling apart for the former Elkhart resident,
who was arrested in May on drug charges.
He was scheduled to appear in court Friday for a hearing to revoke his
$150,000 bond. But instead he skipped the hearing and then allegedly set
fire to buildings on his property, which he had stood to lose under the
state's Drug Forfeiture Act.
Police said an anonymous telephone caller told them the fires were set "to
ambush law enforcement officers when they arrived in response to the fire.''
It's believed Crosslin, Rohm or Peoples or a combination of the three also
fired shots at three aircraft that flew over the property. One of the
aircraft, a helicopter used by WNDU-TV, Channel 16, South Bend, was damaged.
On Monday, Crosslin had federal charges levied against him, resulting in
the dispatch of FBI agents and a federal warrant against Crosslin on
charges of attempted destruction of an aircraft and using a firearm to
commit a felony. He was facing up to 30 years in prison if convicted of those.
On the state criminal counts, Crosslin was charged with manufacturing
marijuana, more than 200 plants, a 15-year felony; maintaining a drug
house, a two-year misdemeanor; felony firearm, a two-year felony; and
possession of a firearm by a felon, a five-year felony.
Underwood said the show-cause petition and motion to revoke $150,000 bond
for Crosslin grew out of a festival that was staged at the farm and
campground Aug. 17 and 18.
He said bond conditions specified no such activity was to take place at the
farm, based on drug activities that allegedly took place at the events.
Two more buildings were burned on the farm and campground, reportedly on
Saturday. Underwood said the fires were set by Crosslin and not law
enforcement.
Rohm is charged with manufacturing marijuana, maintaining a drug house, and
felony firearm.
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