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NOT GUILTY: Antrim jury acquits all 3 in Whitmer kidnap plot trial

Eric Molitor hugs someone after being acquitted by an Antrim County jury. He and two other men were accused of providing material support to an act of terrorism and illegally possessing a firearm. Prosecutors had accused them of aiding in the failed plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.  <i>(Photo: Michael Livingston/IPR News)</i>
Michael Livingston
/
IPR News
Eric Molitor hugs someone after being acquitted by an Antrim County jury. He and two other men were accused of providing material support to an act of terrorism and illegally possessing a firearm. Prosecutors had accused them of aiding in the failed plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. (Photo: Michael Livingston/IPR News)

This is a developing story and will be updated.

A tearful Eric Molitor gave hugs to supporters in an Antrim County courtroom Friday, where a jury acquitted him and two other men who were accused of aiding in the plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

Molitor, William Null, and Michael Null were charged with providing material support to an act of terrorism, and faced a felony firearm charge, too.

After the verdict was read, declaring all three men not guilty, Judge Charles Hamlyn said the defendants were free to go, and applause was heard in the courtroom.

"I don't hate my government. I don't hate police," Molitor told reporters afterward. "And I'm not a liar."

The prosecution's argument questioned the sincerity of the defendants' claims that they were either unwilling or unserious participants in the plot.

Defense attorneys argued that associating with the convicted ringleaders of the failed plot was not, itself, a crime.

JoAnne Huls, Whitmer's chief of staff, issued a statement Friday.

“Today’s verdict is disappointing," it read. “A not guilty verdict on the plot to kidnap and kill Governor Whitmer in hopes of starting a civil war will further encourage and embolden radical extremists trying to sow discord and harm public officials or law enforcement."

The prosecution, led by Michigan Assistant Attorney General William Rollstin, did not answer questions from reporters after court was dismissed.

The trial ran more than three weeks. Prosecutors presented hundreds of pieces of evidence, including recordings of the three defendants and some of their social media posts.

We will update this post with more details and reactions throughout the day.

Copyright 2023 Interlochen Public Radio. To see more, visit Interlochen Public Radio.

Ed Ronco joined IPR as its news director in the summer of 2022, after eight years with KNKX Public Radio in Seattle/Tacoma, where he was the local host of All Things Considered.
Michael Livingston reports for IPR from the tip-of-the-mitt – mainly covering Cheboygan, Charlevoix, Emmet and Otsego counties.