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Feds Say 1999 MSU Arson Linked to ELF

Earlier this week U.S. Attorney Charles R. Gross, the FBI, and Michigan State University announced a four-count felony indictment charging four defendants with conspiracy to commit arson, aggravated arson, and arson in connection with the Dec. 31, 1999, arson of Agriculture Hall on the main campus of Michigan State University and the Jan. 1, 2000, arson of commercial logging equipment near Mesick, Michigan.

March 13, 2008

Earlier this week U.S. Attorney Charles R. Gross; Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Special Agent in Charge Andrew G. Arena; MSU President Lou Anna K. Simon; and MSU Police Department Chief James H. Dunlap, announced a four-count felony indictment charging four defendants with conspiracy to commit arson, aggravated arson, and arson in connection with the Dec. 31, 1999, arson of Agriculture Hall on the main campus of Michigan State University and the Jan. 1, 2000, arson of commercial logging equipment near Mesick, Michigan.

The defendants are Marie Jeanette Mason, 46, of Cincinnati, Ohio; Frank Brian Ambrose, 33, of Detroit, Michigan; Aren Bernard Burthwick, 27, of Detroit, Michigan; and Stephanie Lynne Fultz, 27, of Detroit, Michigan.

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According to the Indictment, the four conspired to commit the MSU arson in order to destroy federally funded plant genetic research being conducted by university employees, and Mason and Ambrose then carried out the arson. The indictment alleges that the four also conspired to destroy commercial logging equipment in order to sabotage lumbering activity, and that all four defendants then carried out the arson.

The indictment alleges that both actions were committed on behalf of the "Earth Liberation Front (ELF)," a loosely organized movement of environmental extremists with a history of destroying property, often by arson, in order to intimidate and coerce communities, businesses, and governments into abandoning activities that ELF adherents consider harmful to the environment.

"The Indictment we are announcing today is a testament to the perseverance, dedication and hard work of law enforcement professionals at both the state and federal level," said Gross.

Arena added, "This investigation has been ongoing for almost a decade, and it should be a reminder to all that the FBI does not allow the passage of time to thwart our ability to apply our full resources to a case. In particular, domestic terrorism is a top priority of the FBI and we will continue to aggressively investigate and pursue prosecution of all such matters. We would also like to thank the MSU Police Department for its cooperation throughout this investigation."

Speaking for the University, MSU President Simon observed that "This was more than an attack on a building and the destruction of valuable property. It was an assault on the core value of free and open inquiry at a research university. We always must be open to ideas that challenge our own, but what we must never allow are disruptions meant to shut down the open marketplace of ideas."

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Commenting on the MSU Police Department's significant role in the investigation, Chief Dunlap explained "This was a significant act of domestic terrorism, which caused more than a million dollars in damage to facilities and loss of research records. As a result, the University dedicated an unprecedented amount of resources and personnel to investigate this crime, and the Michigan State University Police Department appreciates the cooperation of both the FBI and the United States Attorney's Office in the joint investigation of this case and the resulting Federal Indictment."

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