Michigan Militia


The Michigan Militia is a paramilitary Michigan-based organization founded in 1994 by Norman Olson, a veteran of the US Air Force. The group was formed in response to perceived encroachments by the federal government on the rights of citizens. It is part of a wider militia movement.

Organization

At its peak the Michigan Militia Corps claimed to have 10,000 members, although its membership now is several hundreds. The Militia's main areas of focus are paramilitary training and emergency response. They are also involved in search and rescue, community preparedness and disaster relief. In some brigades, participating in paramilitary training is not a requirement for membership.

History

Origin

The Michigan Milita Corps were founded in 1994 by Norman "Norm" Olson, a former US Air Force non-commissioned officer from Alanson, Michigan.
The early meetings of the Michigan militia were attended by Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols before they carried out the Oklahoma City bombing on April 9, 1995, which drew media attention to the organization. Olson published a press release blaming the Japanese for the bombing, supposedly in retaliation for a clandestine US-sponsored gas attack in the Tokyo subway system. The leadership of the MMC forced Olson to resign one month after the bombing. On June 15, 1995, he testified before the United States Senate Subcommittee on Terrorism along with militia leaders from other states. Olson's opening statement included the following words:
Not only does the Constitution specifically allow the formation of a Federal Army, it also recognizes the inherent right of the people to form militia. Further, it recognizes that the citizen and his personal armaments are the foundation of the militia.

Leadership conflicts

Following his resignation, Olson continued to be involved with the militia, although he increasingly criticized the group for being "too moderate". Olson sought to regain his position as the leader of the MMC, but lost July 1995 an electoral contest against Lynn Van Huizen, a US Army veteran who saw service in Vietnam. Following this defeat, Olson founded his own militia, the Northern Michigan Regional Militia, to "resurrect and re-energize what the militia initially was". In response, VanHuizen distanced himself from Olson, stating that the group rejected his "radical views".
On February 15, 1998 a dissident faction challenged the leadership of VanHuizen and Tom Wayne, the Chief of Staff for the Michigan Militia, mainly due to VanHuizen and Wayne's project of expanding the powers of the state command. On March 15, the breakaway group elected Joe Pilchak, a mechanical engineer from Genesee County, as their state commander. VanHuizen and Wayne continued to hold the constitutionalist faction of the MMC in the western part of Michigan, although Pilchak's "millenial" wing has proven stronger in the eastern part of the state. In the years that followed the Oklahoma City bombing, however, the Michigan Militia's Corps membership slowly declined.

Recent developments

On May 12, 2020, the Michigan Militia helped a barbershop reopen as he was defying the governor's orders of closure for non-essential businesses during the Covid-19 pandemic. A local Shiawassee County circuit court judge had however rejected the state decision of temporary restraining order and ruled that the barbershop was allowed to remain open. After remaining open for more than a week, the shop was eventually closed after the Michigan's Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs temporarily pulled the owner's license to cut hair.

Views

Van Huizen was considered a more moderate militia leader by the FBI's 1999 report Project Megiddo: "A number of militia leaders, such as Lynn Van Huizen of the Michigan Militia Corps – Wolverines, have gone to some effort to actively rid their ranks of radical members who are inclined to carry out acts of violence and/or terrorism."
According to scholar Mack Mariani, both Olson and Van Huizen – and leaders of the Militia movement in general – nonetheless share the view that "the American Republic is in such a deep state of crisis that average citizens must join the militia movement in order to defend themselves against an increasingly tyrannical government and out-of-control government agents." The mythology of the American Revolution is also significant among militia leaders like Olson or Wayne, who viewed themselves as the last defenders of the true principles of the revolution.