Sunday, July 18, 2021

07182021 - FBI Agent Richard Trask - Charged With Felony Assault With Intent To Do Great Bodily Harm Less Than Murder
























Bodycam video shows takedown of FBI agent in Whitmer kidnap plot
WOOD TV8 News
Dec 19, 2021





"Do not turn your volume off on this case. OK? Keep it on the whole time."


















Keep an eye on Agent Richard Trask's criminal case. I wouldn't be surprised if this is pled down under MCL769.4a - Michigan's Lautenberg Amendment/Domestic Violence Gun Ban Loophole for law enforcement and officials charged with any act of domestic violence less than murder. Trask is the lead FBI agent in the investigation of the Governor Whitmer kidnapping plot.

If Trask pleads under MCL 769.4a: 1) Stiffest punishment would be 12 months probation; 2) Conviction would be expunged at end of probation period; 3) Trask would be able to return to position with FBI as he would be allowed to use a firearm, despite DV conviction.




















FBI agent charged in assault of wife headed toward jury trial
MLive
August 31, 2021





























KALAMAZOO, MI – The FBI agent accused of assaulting his wife is headed toward a jury trial.

Richard Trask waived his preliminary examination Aug. 31 before Kalamazoo County District Court Judge Christopher Haenicke. Trask is charged with one felony charge of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder.

Trask’s case was sent to Kalamazoo County Circuit Court where a hearing will be scheduled at a later date.

The charge stems from an incident on July 18 at the home he shares with his wife in Oshtemo Township.

Trask is accused of assaulting his wife by smashing her head into a nightstand and choking her. When police arrived on scene, she had blood running down her head, according to a probable cause affidavit.

Trask joined the FBI in 2011 as a special agent, according to his LinkedIn page. He is the lead agent in the case against the people accused of plotting to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

In their bedroom at home, the wife was laying down when Trask got on top of her and grabbed the sides of her head, the affidavit said. Trask smashed her head into a nearby nightstand multiple times, the wife told police.

She then tried to grab Trask’s beard to get him off, but he started to choke her, the affidavit said. The woman told police she doesn’t think she lost consciousness.

The wife grabbed Trask’s testicles, which ended the fight, the affidavit said.
















Whitmer kidnapping plot under fire after allegations FBI told informant to lie, delete text messages
Iosco News-Herald
Aug 16, 2021 



When the Michigan government announced the foiling of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in October of 2020, many applauded the law enforcement agency working the case.

Attorneys for the alleged members of the kidnapping plot, however, are claiming Federal Bureau of Investigation deceit and entrapment of innocent people.

Mlive reported Michael Hills, an attorney for Brandon Caserta, one of six men indicted, claimed an FBI special agent told a paid confidential informant identified as “Dan” to lie, delete messages between them, and implicate an innocent third party.

Hills requested government provide all communications between “Dan” and the FBI.

“These text messages indicate the F.B.I. was pushing their paid agent to actively recruit people into an overt act in furtherance of a conspiracy,” Hills wrote.

“Counsel has found further text messages between (special agent) Impola and Dan indicating Dan should destroy his text messages and instruct Dan to lie and accuse an innocent 3rd party of being a federal agent spy to the founder of Wolverine Watchmen.”

Mlive said Hills provided a transcript of the FBI agent, who allegedly texted: “Copy. Best thing to do is deny and accuse somebody else like Trent.” The agent, again allegedly, instructed the informant to “Be sure to delete these.”

If true, this would continue to build the case the FBI entrapped several people in this plan.

“The F.B.I is instructing a paid F.B.I. informant to lie and paint an innocent citizen as an undercover federal agent to a man they claim is the head of a domestic terrorist organization, who they claim is paranoid about being infiltrated by the feds, who they claim has bragged about tossing a Molotov cocktail into a police officer’s house,” Hills said. “This behavior, evidenced by the telephonic communication between F.B.I. handler Impola and Dan, casts a dark shadow over the credibility of this investigation and demonstrates the need for immediate disclosure as demanded.”

However, the government argues these people weren’t entrapped but chose to pursue a radical agenda.

The deceit continues to blur the line between who was an FBI agent, confidential informant, or an extremist and which group fueled the conspiracy.

In July 2021, Buzzfeed reported the FBI was involved when the plot began and even used informants to encourage the group to carry out its plans. Militiamen say this is entrapment and claim they couldn’t have advanced the plot without government informants, who went as far as to lead military training simulations.

The lead FBI agent credited with foiling the plot, special Agent Richard Trask, 39, was arrested in July and charged with assault with intent to do great bodily harm after allegedly beating and choking his wife after returning home from a swinger sex party. An affidavit says Trask got on top of his wife Sandy in their bed and “grabbed the side of her head and smashed it several times on the nightstand."
















Court date delayed for FBI agent accused of assaulting wife
MLive
Aug 03, 2021




























KALAMAZOO, MI – The next court date for the FBI agent charged with assault was delayed a month.

Richard Trask is charged with one felony charge of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder in Kalamazoo County District Court. The charge stems from an incident on July 18 at the home he shares with his wife in Oshtemo Township.

He had a preliminary examination Tuesday, Aug. 3. During an in-person hearing, the preliminary examination was adjourned to Aug. 31, in part, due to a necessary witness who was unable to be in court. The Kalamazoo County Prosecutor’s Office had no additional comment, Chief Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Scott Brower said.

Trask is accused of assaulting his wife by smashing her head into a nightstand and choking her. When police arrived on scene, she had blood running down her head, according to a probable cause affidavit.

Trask joined the FBI in 2011 as a special agent, according to his LinkedIn page. He is the lead agent in the case against the people accused of plotting to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

“Richard Trask is a very honorable man,” defense attorney Sarissa Montague said. “He has served this community for many, many, many years. He loves his family. He loves his job, and he loves his country.”

In their bedroom at home, the wife was laying down when Trask got on top of her and grabbed the sides of her head, the affidavit said. Trask smashed her head into a nearby nightstand multiple times, the wife told police.

She then tried to grab Trask’s beard to get him off, but he started to choke her, the affidavit said. The woman told police she doesn’t think she lost consciousness.

The wife grabbed Trask’s testicles, which ended the fight, the affidavit said.

Trask’s case should not be tried in the media, instead it needs to stay in the courtroom, Montague said.

“For now, I’m asking people to understand that this is a very difficult time for him and his family,” she said. “We’re asking that you give him privacy and his family privacy until this case is adjudicated.”
















Attorney speaks after arraignment of FBI agent
FOX 17 News - West Michigan
August 03, 2021


KALAMAZOO, Mich. — The attorney of an FBI agent that was charged with assault last month has released a statement Tuesday afternoon.

"Richard Trask is an honorable man who has served his country throughout his entire career,” Attorney Sarissa Montague said. "He loves his family and career as a servant to our nation. Out of respect to all parties involved, we will not try this case in the court of public opinion."

Trask was reportedly given a $10,000 personal recognizance bond, which he posted.















Attorney for FBI agent charged with beating woman says he's 'a honorable man'
WWMT TV - News Channel 3
August 3rd 2021


FBI agent Richard Trask (right) declined to comment after leaving the Kalamazoo County Courthouse Aug. 3, 2021 (WWMT/Mike Krafcik)



FBI agent Richard Trask (right) declined to comment after leaving the Kalamazoo County Courthouse Aug. 3, 2021 (WWMT/Mike Krafcik)



FBI agent Richard Trask (pictured) covers his face as he leaves the Kalamazoo County Courthouse Aug. 3, 2021 (WWMT/Mike Krafcik)



FBI agent Richard Trask is charged with assault with intent to do harm after deputies said Trask beat a woman at his Oshtemo Township home July 18, 2021 (WWMT/Kalamazoo County Jail)

KALAMAZOO, Mich. — A FBI agent on the Gov. Gretchen Whitmer kidnapping case charged with assaulting a woman refused to answer questions as he left a Kalamazoo County courtroom Wednesday.

Richard Trask and his attorney did not questions on whether he will still be one of the lead FBI agents testifying against suspects accused of plotting to kidnap Whitmer. Trask appeared in Kalamazoo County District Court for a preliminary exam hearing, which was adjourned until Aug. 31.

FBI agent Richard Trask offered no comment as he left the Kalamazoo Court House


Trask is charged with assault with intent to do harm after Kalamazoo County deputies said Trask beat a woman at his home July 18.




Court records reveal Trask and a woman got into several arguments after leaving a swingers party at a Kalamazoo County hotel. Deputies said later that same night, Trask smashed the woman’s head into a nightstand several times and started to choke her at his Osthemo Township home.

Trask is one of the lead FBI agents testifying in federal and state court cases tied to the alleged plot to kidnap the governor.




Sarissa Montague, Trask's attorney, called the agent "an honorable man" as she read from a prepared statement outside court Wednesday.

"He’s spent his entire career protecting and serving his nation, he loves his family, his job and loves this country. We're not trying this case in the media, we're going to leave that for the courtroom. This is a difficult time for him and his family," said Montague.
















Hearing delayed four weeks for key FBI agent in Whitmer kidnap case
The Detroit News
August 03, 2021


An evidentiary hearing for an assault charge against a key FBI agent in the alleged kidnapping plot against Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was adjourned for about four weeks Tuesday. 

A prosecutor told Kalamazoo County District Judge Richard Santoni that an officer involved in the case against Richard Trask was out of town and unavailable for the preliminary examination, a hearing held to determine whether there is enough evidence to send a case to trial. 

Defense also mentioned there was a "non-participating complainant" in the case. 

Santoni granted the adjournment of the preliminary examination, allowing for a four-week delay for the hearing. 

Trask, 39, is accused of hitting his wife's head against a nightstand and choking her following an argument related to their attendance at a swingers' party. He was charged last month with assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder. 

Court filings in his case indicate Trask's wife had bloody lacerations on the right side of her head and "blood all over chest, clothing arms and hand," as well as "severe" bruising to her neck and throat.

Trask, who was tracked down in the parking lot of a supermarket on Main Street in Oshtemo Township, refused to give a statement about the incident after he was read his Miranda rights, according to the affidavit.

An employee of the FBI since 2011, Trask served as the public face in the agency's investigation of an alleged attempt to kidnap Whitmer and testified in federal court in the case. 

His arrest came as defense lawyers leveled a broad attack on the foundation of the high-profile case and suggested a second FBI agent was trying to sabotage defense teams. Defense attorneys appear to have adopted a strategy that targets in large part the work of FBI agents and claims that FBI informants entrapped men accused in the alleged kidnapping plot.

The defendants in the case have been portrayed by their attorneys as tough talkers who never carried out the planned kidnapping. 
















Documents Reveal More About Gruesome Abuse Allegations Against Lead FBI Agent on Gretchen Whitmer Kidnapping Case
Law And Crime
July 28, 2021



Police reports obtained by Law&Crime through a public records request shed new light on domestic violence charges against a key FBI agent involved in the prosecution of Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s alleged would-be kidnappers.

FBI Special Agent Richard Trask, 39, stands accused of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder, according to Kalamazoo County Court records reviewed by Law&Crime after being arrested on charges of aggravated felonious assault against a family member who was being strong armed, a term of art under Michigan law which is defined as “the use of physical force or coercion.”

That physical force, according to the Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s Department, left Trask’s wife of five years in a state of blood-soaked fear, embarrassment and apprehension about her husband’s career.

Dispatch for the law enforcement agency noted that the “female was heavily bleeding [and] she did not know where she was bleeding from,” a criminal information notes. Trask’s wife was still in the bedroom where she was allegedly beaten when she made the 911 call.

As sheriff’s deputies arrived on the scene, unable to locate the front door of the house, the alleged victim came out to meet them.

“[Y]ou could see blood running down from her face with multiple blood stains on her clothes,” Deputy Paul Kidd wrote in the information.

“She had what appeared to be a paper towel as she was attempting to stop the bleeding from the right side of her head,” the document continues. “She appeared to be extremely frightened and she kept repeating herself that she was embarrassed.”

Deputies and a sergeant began searching for the suspect after learning that he had left the scene in his wife’s 2020 Toyota Highlander–one of many vehicles used by the family.

After fruitless searches of locations brainstormed by the three responding officers, Kidd was instructed to head back to the station and prepare his report. On the way, the deputy and his supervisor both got a “ping” and eventually Trask was located.

“After he was secured in my cruiser, I rolled down his window and read his Miranda rights off of the Miranda Rights card issued to me by Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s Department,” Kidd noted. “Trask stated that he did understand his rights. I asked him if he wanted to give me a statement regarding what had happened in the night and he stated he did not.”

But the FBI agent allegedly spoke up at least once while in custody:
While in the backseat of my cruiser, TRASK remained silent with the exception of asking me what his charges were regarding this event. I had told TRASK that he was being lodged at the Kalamazoo County Jail for aggravated domestic violence, assault by strangulation. At this point, he remained quiet for the remainder of the transport. As it was pitch black out due to the time being approximately 04:16 when the arrest was made, when we got into the sally part of the garage, it was clear that TRASK had dried blood all over his body, to include his chest, back, and his hands. During the change out process, the jail nurse had arrived on scene. The jail nurse had verified that there were no injuries on TRASK and that the blood that was on his body did not come from himself.

The alleged incident–and what led up to it–that produced the blood on Trask’s body is described in detail.

According to the document, Trask’s wife told deputies she “was not really into the swinger life” and that this “kept [her husband] at an irritated state” as the couple “attended a couple’s swinger retreat at the Delta Hotel in Oshtemo, Michigan.”

Upon arriving home, the couple became deeply enmeshed in a verbal argument, the document says.

“While in bed, Trask had gotten on top of [his wife] and then in a physical altercation, grabbed her head and started smashing it against the night table in their bedroom,” the information alleges. “She states that after being struck many times in the face, Trask then put his hands around her neck and started to strangulate her.”

“[Trask’s wife] stated that she had grabbed Trask’s testicles as hard as she could and therefore he had jumped off of her,” she told Kidd in response to a question as to how the incident came to a conclusion. “While the altercation was happening, she states that she was attempting to free herself from Trask and she had attempted to grab his beard multiple times, attempting to rip his head/face away from her body.”

Kidd notes the extent of the injuries photographed that night:
I did start my photos with the case screen on my patrol cruiser. I then took a faraway photo and then worked my way closer to her injuries. As I was taking photos, it was evident that she had several lacerations in her skull, as well severe bruising around her neck and throat area. It did appear that she had minor scrapes on her forearms and hands from trying to defend herself from the assault. Shortly after taking photographs, EMS had arrived on scene.

As EMS rendered aid to the FBI agent’s wife, she “removed the paper towel [and] she still had blood running out of her right side laceration in her skull.”

While being triaged, sheriff’s deputies were able to obtain Trask’s cellular phone number “as he was actively texting [his wife] stating messages in a hateful manner.”

Those allegedly hateful text messages eventually led police right to the FBI agent who authored the original federal criminal complaint filed against the men who allegedly planned to kidnap Michigan’s Democratic Gov. Whitmer over her COVID-19 mandates.

The couple’s children were, on the advice of authorities, taken to stay with a coworker that night and left while paramedics dealt with the alleged victim’s wounds.

“I had asked [Trasks’s wife] if she was seeking prosecution regarding the assault and she stated no, she did not want to ruin his career,” Kidd noted near the end of his report. “I again reminded her that she needed to talk to the prosecutor regardless of her decision and she stated she understood.”

Note: Trask’s wife is not being named in the story as she is an alleged victim of domestic violence. For that reason, the documents which name her are also not being embedded herein.


















Silence Is Not An Option
Comment To: Robert Gruler Esq's video - "Undercover FBI Agent Richard Trask Assaults Wife and is Released On Bond"
July 25, 2021



I am the founder of the OIDV Project Of Michigan/Officer Involved Domestic Violence. In short, Michigan officials and legislators do not care about these victims. The concern of our officials/legislators is in protecting the abusing officer. Michigan offers absolutely no protections/programs for victims of OIDV.

FBI Agent Richard Trask will not be held accountable for his assault on his wife. Michigan legislators have protected abusing LE officers from accountability via MCL 769.4a - which allows an abuser to plead guilty to any offense of DV (less than murder). The offender's only punishment under MCL 769.4a is probation, AND the offense is removed from their record/disappears after one year. Additionally, all criminal hearings under MCL 769.4a are private and the media cannot report on the case/sentence. 

Although state laws cannot supersede federal laws, MCL 769.4a circumvents the Lautenberg/DV Gun Ban [18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(9)]; The Gun Control Act of 1968 [18U.S.C. 44§921] and the Federal Crime Victims Right Act [18 U.S. Code § 3771].

Additionally, victims of OIDV are not protected under Color Of Law.

Sadly, there is no concern for the safety of FBI agent Trask's victim - or for the retaliation that the responding PD/officer may be subjected to.
















Entrapment accusations and scandal emerge in Whitmer kidnapping plot case
MLive
Jul 25, 2021


Entrapment claims, allegations that media tainted the possibility of a fair trial and the arrest of a lead FBI agent who’s now accused of brutally beating his wife following a swingers’ sex party are among the latest developments in the prosecution of 14 men charged with conspiring to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

One night in September, three vehicles filled with alleged terrorists and undercover FBI informants conducted surveillance on Whitmer’s vacation home.

A group stopped to inspect a bridge that one FBI informant said he could help them detonate in an effort to slow police response should they abduct Whitmer from her Birch Lake cottage near Grand Traverse Bay. Others used night vision goggles to peer in on the politician’s home from across the water at a boat launch.

The plan, according to the FBI and Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, was to kidnap Whitmer and potentially strand her in the lake or transport her to Wisconsin to be tried for treason in the hopes of sparking a civil war, officials have said.

The men were angry over coronavirus lockdown orders that they believed infringed on their rights.

Attorneys for several of the accused conspirators in court filings and during arguments claim this is a case of entrapment, that without the FBI and its at least one dozen paid informants encouraging the men, offering up an explosives expert or paying for hotels and other costs related to meetings and training sessions, the plan would have never hatched.

Entrapment
Portage-based attorney Scott Graham, who represents Kaleb Franks, believes the government is withholding a trove of communications that would prove that argument.

“When Kaleb Franks set out to train in weaponry and tactics, enjoy time outdoors, and spend a midwestern summer trying to find respite from the cares of professional and personal obligations and demands, he had no thoughts of harassing the government, staging a coup, or ending up on the national stage as an alleged terrorist,” Graham wrote in a July 15 federal court filing. “Only through the diligent efforts of government informants and undercover agents did Mr. Franks end up framed as a lawless agitator.”

Graham in a motion is asking Chief U.S. District Judge Robert J. Jonker of the Western District of Michigan to order the FBI to release to the defense all of its communications with and files pertaining to informants.

“Counsel asks the court to order the government to produce all materials related to the confidential human sources used in this case, their qualifications and the vetting they underwent, their performance and their communication with agents, and any instructions and admonishments,” Graham wrote.

Similar accusations were put forth in another motion filed July 12 by attorney Michael D. Hills, who represents Brandon Caserta. Hills points to a brief text-message exchange between an FBI handler and informant that he believes illustrates possible entrapment.

A portion of the conversation appeared in cellphone screen shots that Hills believes the government inadvertently released to the defendants as part if its discovery and evidence release. Now Hill is asking for a full forensic imaging and extraction of the the informant and FBI agent involved in the exchange.

The FBI agent, identified in the filing as Henrick Impola, asked the informant, who used the moniker “Thor,” to “maximize attendance” and invite several of the now defendants, including Daniel Harris, Adam Fox, the alleged ringleader, and Ty Garbin, to conduct reconnaissance at Whitmer’s vacation home.

“In the small window the defense has into communications ... the FBI is encouraging its paid informant, on FBI phones, to actively bring Caserta into a recon to create an overt act in furtherance of conspiracy, or create evidence of an agreement regarding a conspiracy,” Hills wrote. “Thor gets the command from his handler and complies, actively orchestrating and pushing at least one of the overt acts alleged in the superseding indictment, that is attempting to corral as many people into the alleged conspiracy as possible.”




Domestic violence
FBI Agent Richard Trask II testified for the prosecution in several federal hearings as one of the lead orchestrators and supervisors of the sting that led to 13 arrests in October.

He’s now facing criminal charges of his own, accused of smashing his wife’s head against a nightstand and choking her at a home in Kalamazoo County’s Oshtemo Township on July 18, according to a criminal complaint filed this week.

On the day of the attack, Trask and his wife drank alcohol while attending a swingers party at a hotel in Oshtemo Township, Trask’s wife told police. She didn’t like the event and the couple fought on the drive home, according to an affidavit in support of the charges against Trask.

In their bedroom at home, the wife was laying down when Trask got on top of her and grabbed the sides of her head, the affidavit said. Trask smashed her head into a nearby nightstand multiple times, the wife told police.

Trask’s wife then tried to grab Trask’s beard to get him off of her, but he started to choke her, the affidavit said. The woman told police she doesn’t think she lost consciousness before she grabbed Trask’s testicles, ending the fight, the affidavit said.

Trask’s wife had multiple cuts on the right side of her head and severe bruising on her neck when police arrived, the affidavit said. She also had blood running out of her head and all over her chest, clothing, arms and hands. Trask grabbed some clothing and fled the house in his wife’s vehicle, according to the affidavit.

Police found Trask in the Meijer parking lot where he was arrested and refused to give a statement. Trask is charged with a felony count of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder, punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

The FBI has acknowledged that it is aware of the charges, but spokesperson Mara Schneider declined further comment. It’s not clear if Trask’s role as a lead witness for the prosecution in the kidnap plot case will continue.




Media meddling
The unique circumstances surrounding the Whitmer kidnap plot spurred extraordinary public interest in the case, including national attention from the New York Times and Buzzfeed.

That attention, attorney Hills wrote in a request to change the venue of the trial, tentatively set for Oct. 12 in Grand Rapids, “has corrupted the potential trial atmosphere to the point that Mr. Franks will be denied a fair trial in Michigan.”

If the judge grants the motion, it would be a rare ruling.

Judge Jonker has already taken measures to attempt and ensure public scrutiny doesn’t bias possible jurors. A protective order was issued to ban attorneys from discussing and sharing documents or evidence with the public or media.

Several media companies, including the Detroit News and New York Times, fought for and successfully convinced the court to allow release of certain photos and videos entered into the record as exhibits during a detention hearing for defendant Carry Croft Jr. Photos depict Croft with armed with a military-style gun and shouldering a Boogaloo Boys Hawaiian pattern flag. The video shows croft is seen crouching behind barrels and firing on targets with a rifle while wearing a Continental soldier-styled hat during a Wisconsin training exercise.

The judge, however, denied media requests for audio recordings of Croft that were played at his detention hearing.

“In the audio recordings, defendant Croft expounds in an excited tone about his intent to commit acts of terrorism and claims God has granted him permission to do so,” Jonker wrote in his order denying release of the audio. “In one recording, Croft explicitly discusses kidnapping Governor Whitmer.

“These recordings are more inflammatory in tone than most of the exhibits introduced at the codefendants’ hearings, and they also speak to ultimate issues, which carries the greater danger of tainting the prospective jury pool.”

Jonker acknowledged public interest in the case is “legitimate,” but said he must weigh that against the bias public access to the case could potentially create.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office has indicated it disagrees with the request to move the trial, but has not yet submitted a brief on the subject.
















FOX News video of FBI Agent Richard Trask's arrest for domestic violence DELETED!!!
Jul 24, 2021


Fortunately, OIDV Project of Michigan downloaded the video and made a google-drive for the video:

















FBI Special Agent Charged With Felony Assault
Federal Law Enforcement Careers
Jul 24, 2021


Many of you are aware of an FBI investigation that charged members of a Michigan militia who are alleged to have plotted to kidnap the Governor of Michigan.  Now the Case Agent in that investigation, Special Agent Richard Trask, has been charged with felony assault on his wife.















Undercover FBI Agent Richard Trask Assaults Wife and is Released On Bond
Robert Gruler Esq. Live
July 23, 2021



FBI agent Richard Trask appeared in Court facing criminal charges for assaulting his wife after a swinger’s party and we review the interplay with the Governor Whitmer kidnapping plot.​

And more! Join criminal defense lawyer Robert F. Gruler in a discussion on the latest legal, criminal and political news, including:​
🔵 FBI Agent Richard Trask II was in court facing charges of one count of felony assault.​
🔵 According to an affidavit filed by the Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s Office, Trask allegedly smashed his wife’s head into a nightstand multiple times.​
🔵 FBI agent Richard Trask was the same agent who authored the criminal complaint and affidavit against the alleged Whitmer kidnappers.​
🔵 Trask, who has worked for the FBI since 2011 and is 39 years old, was upset after a swinger’s party.​
🔵 Live chat after each segment at watchingthewatchers.locals.com!​





















FBI Agent Trask charged with assault to do great bodily harm
WDIV - Click On Detroit
July 22, 2021
















Undercover FBI Agent Trask Assault
July 22, 2021
Robert Gruler Esq. Live



FBI agent Richard Trask appeared in Court facing criminal charges for assaulting his wife after a swinger’s party and we review the interplay with the Governor Whitmer kidnapping plot.
















FBI agent accused of attacking a woman after a swinger's party, according to authorities
WWMT News - Channel 3
July 22, 2021



KALAMAZOO, Mich. — A key investigator into the alleged plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was accused of attacking a woman.

A Kalamazoo County Judge charged Richard James Trask, an FBI agent who was part of the investigation into the plot to kidnap Whitmer, with assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder after court documents show he was arrested July 18, 2021, in the Meijer parking lot on West Main Street in Oshtemo.

“The FBI is aware of the recent charges brought by the Kalamazoo County, Michigan Prosecuting Attorney’s Office involving an FBI Special Agent. We are fully cooperating with the prosecuting attorney’s office on this matter. In accordance with FBI police, the incident is subject to internal review, and we cannot comment further at this time,” FBI Special Agent Mara Schneider, the public affairs officer, said.

Kalamazoo County Sheriff deputies were told that Richard James Trask, 39, and a woman had gone to a swinger party held at a hotel on Holiday Lane and had been in several arguments throughout the night before leaving.

Once at home, the court documents state, the woman told police that he smashed her head into a nightstand several times and started strangling her. She grabbed his testicles, which caused him to let go.

When Kalamazoo County Sheriff deputies arrived to the 10th Street Oshtemo Township home Sunday night they said they found the woman with blood running from several cuts on her head and bruising on her neck.

The woman said he grabbed some clothes and left in her vehicle.

Deputies said they found Trask in the vehicle in the West Main Street Meijer parking lot. He was arrested.

He was released on bond. He faces 10 years in prison if convicted.

Trask's arrest comes as a federal judge has set a trial date for six of the men charged in connection with a plot to kidnap and kill Whitmer.

Adam Fox, Barry Croft, Ty Garbin, Kaleb Franks, Daniel Harris and Brandon Caserta were charged with conspiracy to kidnap the governor of Michigan. They face up to life in prison if convicted.
















FBI agent involved in Gov. Whitmer investigation accused of assaulting wife
Detroit Free Press
July 22, 2021
KALAMAZOO, Mich. — An FBI agent whose affidavit supported the initial charges in an alleged plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is accused of assaulting his wife after returning home from a party.

Details were in a court filing accompanying the felony charge against Richard Trask, The Detroit News reported Wednesday.

Trask's wife had lacerations on her head and blood on her chest, arms and hand, Kalamazoo County sheriff's investigators wrote.

She ended the attack Sunday by grabbing Trask's groin, investigators said.

Trask is charged with assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder. The FBI has declined to comment about his job status since Monday when he appeared in court and was released on bond.

A defense lawyer has not filed an appearance in the case, the clerk's office said Wednesday.

Trask has testified and provided details about an alleged scheme to kidnap Whitmer last year in retaliation for her orders to slow the spread of the coronavirus. One man has pleaded guilty in federal court and roughly a dozen others are awaiting trial, some in state court.
















FBI agent in Gov. Whitmer kidnap bust accused of attacking wife: report
Richard Trask could face up to 10 years in prison for the assault
FOX News - Detroit
July 22, 2021



An FBI agent who worked the controversial investigation into the alleged plot to kill Michigan’s governor was arrested earlier this week for assaulting his wife after the two went to a swingers party, a local report said.

G-Man Richard Trask of Kalamazoo repeatedly slammed his wife’s head into a nightstand and choked her with both hands before she stopped the attack by grabbing his crotch on Sunday, The Detroit News reported, citing a court affidavit.

Trask’s wife’s chest, clothes and hand were covered in blood and she had "severe" bruises on around her neck, the affidavit reportedly said.

The two had come home after attending an Oshtempo Township hotel event the publication called "a swingers party." After some drinks, they argued on the way home about how Trask’s wife didn’t enjoy the party, the News stated.

Once home, he allegedly got on top of her in bed and "smashed" her head into the nightstand several times before she tried to grab his beard to get free, the affidavit said. That’s when he allegedly choked her, the News reported.

Trask, 39, was arrested Monday and was released on bond, the News said.

"In accordance with FBI policy, the incident is subject to internal review, and I cannot comment further at this time," FBI spokeswoman Mara Schneider told LawandCrime.com

He is facing up to 10 years in prison on a charge of assault with intent to do great bodily harm, according to the News.


Trask’s affidavit was used in charges against the people accused of plotting to kidnap and kill Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in retaliation of her COVID-19 shutdown orders, the Associated Press reported. Trask testified in the case, the AP said.

Some 14 people allegedly part of a group called the Wolverine Watchmen were charged in the plot, but the men have pushed back and said they were set up by the FBI because of their political views.















FBI agent in Whitmer kidnap plot arrested for assaulting wife after swingers party argument
FOX 2 Detroit
Jul 21, 2021





There are new details involving the arrest of the lead federal investigator of the plot to kidnap Governor Gretchen Whitmer. That same FBI agent, Richard Trask, has testified several times in court about the alleged scheme - now, he's accused of assaulting his wife.























FBI agent at center of Whitmer kidnap probe assaulted wife after swingers' party, authorities say
The Detroit News
July 21, 2021



An FBI agent at the center of the investigation into the plot to kidnap and kill Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is accused of smashing his wife's head against a nightstand and choking her after a dispute stemming from their attendance at a swingers' party, according to court records.

Special Agent Richard Trask, 39, of Kalamazoo, was charged Monday with assault with intent to do great bodily harm, less than murder following the alleged incident Sunday.

An affidavit filed by the Kalamazoo County Sheriff's Office in Kalamazoo County District Court said Trask's wife had bloody lacerations to the right side of her head and "blood all over chest, clothing arms and hand," as well as "severe" bruising to her neck and throat.

She told police she and her husband had several drinks at a swingers' party held at a hotel in the 2700 block of S. 11 Street in Oshtemo Township, just west of Kalamazoo, according to the affidavit. She added that she did not like the party and they argued about it on the way home. 

Once they arrived home, Trask got on top of her in their bed and "then grabbed the side of her head and smashed it several times on the nightstand," according to the affidavit.

She attempted to grab his beard to free herself, and he began to choke her around the neck and throat with both hands, according to the affidavit. She ultimately grabbed Trask's testicles, which ended the altercation, the document notes, and Trask left the Oshtemo Township home in her vehicle. 

Trask, who was tracked down in the parking lot of a supermarket on Main Street in Oshtemo Township, refused to give a statement about the incident after he was read his Miranda rights, according to the affidavit.

Trask, 39, has worked for the FBI since 2011 and served as the FBI's public face in the Whitmer case, testifying in federal court about the investigation. He has worked on cases involving espionage, terrorism and domestic extremism investigations.

The FBI on Wednesday declined to comment. FBI spokeswoman Mara Schneider on Monday said the bureau is cooperating with the prosecutor's office. Trask's job status was unclear.

"In accordance with FBI policy, the incident is subject to internal review, and I cannot comment further at this time," she said in a statement.

Trask was released on a $10,000 personal recognizance bond following an arraignment in 8th District Court in Kalamazoo and faces a charge punishable by up to 10 years in prison. As part of his bond conditions, he is prohibited from possessing a firearm.

Aside from his FBI duties, Trask opened a gym at his rural property in Oshtemo Township near Kalamazoo and offers CrossFit training, according to social media posts and state business filings. He filed state paperwork for BCB Health & Wellness last year and maintains an active Instagram account showing him exercising, flexing and posing shirtless.

Trask's arrest comes at a critical juncture in the criminal case against five men charged in federal court with plotting to kidnap Whitmer. Defense lawyers last week leveled a broad attack on the foundation of the high-profile case and suggested a second FBI agent was trying to sabotage defense teams.

“It’s the last thing you want for a major case like this,” said Andrew Arena, former special agent in charge of the FBI’s Detroit office. “Any time you give the defense any ammunition it's not good.”

The internal review would include an investigation by FBI internal affairs, Arena said.

“Depending on the severity, it could be a suspension until things are ironed out one way or another,” Arena said.

Trask was arrested one week after defense lawyers provided the clearest view of how they plan to attack the kidnapping plot case.

Court filings revealed a defense strategy that involves suppressing evidence, attacking the work of FBI agents and claiming FBI informants entrapped men accused in the conspiracy. Five men are awaiting an October trial in federal court in Grand Rapids, though one defendant has asked U.S. District Judge Robert Jonker to move the trial out of Michigan, arguing media conduct and coverage had "corrupted the potential trial atmosphere."

The arrest is the second potential problem in the case to emerge in recent months.

In March, prosecutors indicted an informant who sources say helped the FBI infiltrate the alleged conspiracy, a rare legal development. The indictment of Wisconsin resident Stephen Robeson after a prolonged period of cooperation suggests the relationship between Robeson and the FBI is destroyed and that prosecutors do not plan on using him at trial, legal experts said.

But defense lawyers can try to call him as a witness and attack Robeson's credibility.

Trask testified in federal court in January against Delaware resident Barry Croft, an accused plotter who is portrayed as the group’s bomb maker. Trask identified Croft as the national leader of the 3 Percenters, a small militia that participated in the Jan. 6 insurgence at the U.S. Capitol.

During the court hearing, Trask helped provide context about multiple undercover recordings that included Croft. At the time, prosecutors wanted Croft held without bond, saying he was a violent extremist.

Defense lawyers have portrayed their clients as tough talkers who were exercising their First Amendment rights who never carried out any kidnapping plot.

















FBI agent linked to Whitmer kidnapping case beat, choked wife after swingers’ party, court records say
MLive
July 21, 2021



KALAMAZOO COUNTY, MI – The FBI agent charged with assault smashed his wife’s head into a nightstand several times, according to court records.

Richard Trask II is charged with one felony count of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder in Kalamazoo County District Court. The charge stems from a domestic violence incident, according to a probable cause affidavit filed by the Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s Office.

Blood was actively running down the side Trask’s wife’s head when police arrived at their home on North 10th Street in Oshtemo Township on July 18, the affidavit said. MLive and the Kalamazoo Gazette do not identify victims of domestic violence without consent.

Trask joined the FBI in 2011 as a special agent, according to his LinkedIn page. He is the lead agent in the case against the people accused of plotting to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

Earlier in the day, Trask and his wife went to a swingers party at a Delta Hotel, 2747 S. 11th St. in Oshtemo Township, the wife told police. She did not like the event and they had multiple verbal arguments during the drive home, the affidavit said.

They had several drinks each, the affidavit said.

In their bedroom at home, the wife was laying down when Trask got on top of her and grabbed the sides of her head, the affidavit said. Trask smashed her head into a nearby nightstand multiple times, the wife told police.

She then tried to grab Trask’s beard to get him off, but he started to choke her, the affidavit said. The woman told police she doesn’t think she lost consciousness.

The wife grabbed Trask’s testicles, which ended the fight, the affidavit said.

She had multiple cuts on the right side of her head and severe bruising on her neck when police arrived, the affidavit said. She also had blood running out of her head and all over her chest, clothing, arms and hands.

Trask grabbed some clothing and fled the house in his wife’s vehicle, according to the affidavit.

Police found Trask in the Meijer parking lot, 6660 W. Main St. After he was read his Miranda rights, Trask said he understood and did not want to give a statement, the affidavit said.

The FBI knows about the charges, FBI spokeswoman Mara Schneider said in a statement sent to MLive. They cannot confirm if Trask is still actively working or not, Schneider said.

“We are fully cooperating with the Prosecuting Attorney’s Office on this matter,” Schneider said. “In accordance with FBI policy, the incident is subject to internal review, and we cannot comment further at this time.”

Trask was granted a personal recognizance bond. He is not allowed to return to his home address as part of his bond conditions, or contact his wife.

Trask is not allowed to possess a gun while out on bond, records show.

His next court hearing is net yet scheduled and he has not hired an attorney, court records show.

















Lead FBI Agent on Whitmer Kidnapping Case Allegedly Beat Wife Until She Had ‘Blood All Over’ After Sex Party
Law And Crime
July 21st, 2021



A key FBI agent working on the investigation into the plot to kidnap and assassinate Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) has been accused of brutally attacking his wife after the couple attended a party where partners offer each other up for sex with friends or strangers.

Authorities reportedly allege the victim made it out of the beating with bloody cuts on the right side of her head as well as “blood all over chest, clothing arms and hand,” and “severe” bruises on her neck and throat.

FBI agent Richard Trask, 39, stands accused of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder, according to Kalamazoo County Court records reviewed by Law&Crime.

An affidavit obtained by The Detroit News alleges that Trask and his wife argued about the swingers’ party on their way home because the FBI agent’s wife was not happy about how things went there.

The alleged victim told police that her husband–whom she said had multiple drinks at the party–jumped on top of her in their bed and “then grabbed the side of her head and smashed it several times on the nightstand,” as she tried to escape from him.

According to the affidavit, Trask’s wife initially grabbed at his beard to get free but he began choking her neck and throat in response to that defensive effort. The struggle eventually ended when she grabbed her husband’s testicles, according to investigators.

Trask then allegedly left their home in his wife’s car, the affidavit alleges. The wanted FBI agent was later arrested by Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s deputies in a supermarket parking lot in Oshtemo Township, Mich.–the same town where the couple lives.

The affidavit claims Trask refused to give police any sort of statement about the incident following his arrest. A lawyer has yet to be named or noticed in the case. The FBI agent faces up to 10 years in prison, if convicted.

“In accordance with FBI policy, the incident is subject to internal review, and I cannot comment further at this time,” FBI spokesperson Mara Schneider said in a statement.

The embarrassing episode comes at a key time for the numerous state and federal defendants in the alleged kidnapping plot–as a recent exposé by BuzzFeed News revealed the FBI was aware of the anti-Whitmer effort all along and engaged in activity that one defendant alleged to be entrapment.

Entrapment, however, is an oft-claimed and rarely successful defense in domestic terrorism cases–though such defenses occasionally do yield dividends for the accused.

One defense attorney working the case claims that the government has been intentionally withholding potentially exculpatory evidence of entrapment in violation of the law.

A legal expert noted the Trask case could be played up to the hilt by the numerous defense attorneys representing 13 of the 14 defendants who have pleaded not guilty.

“It’s the last thing you want for a major case like this,” Andrew Arena, former special agent in charge of the FBI’s Detroit office, told The Detroit News. “Any time you give the defense any ammunition, it’s not good.”

Trask has worked for the FBI since 2011 and authored the original federal criminal complaint filed against the alleged kidnappers. His job status with the nation’s largest law enforcement agency is currently unclear.
















FBI agent in investigation of Whitmer kidnap plot is charged
WWMT News
July 20, 2021



KALAMAZOO, Mich. — Records show an FBI agent who has testified about an alleged plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has been charged with assault.

Richard Trask appeared in a Kalamazoo court Monday and was released. Online records show the alleged offense occurred Sunday.

The court file doesn’t list an attorney yet who could comment.

The FBI says the incident is under review. It declined any additional comment.

Trask has testified in state and federal courts in cases tied to an alleged scheme to kidnap Whitmer in retaliation for orders last year meant to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

One man has pleaded guilty and roughly a dozen others are awaiting trial.
















Gretchen Whitmer kidnap: Who is Richard Trask? FBI agent probing plot charged with assaulting wife
Richard Trask of Kalamazoo, Michigan, was charged with assault and this is a setback to Gretchen Whitmer kidnap plot probe
Meaww.com
Jul 20, 2021







An FBI agent originally credited with helping foil a plot to kidnap and murder Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer is reportedly facing an assault charge, thereby complicating one of the most discussed cases of extremism in the country.

Special Agent Richard Trask, 39, of Kalamazoo, Michigan, was charged on Monday, July 20, with assault with intent to do great bodily harm, less than murder, after a domestic incident with his wife the previous day. The charge is reportedly punishable by up to 10 years in prison, according to The Detroit News.

Following arraignment in the 8th District Court of Kalamazoo, Trask was released from custody on a $10,000 personal recognizance bond. His arrest came at a critical stage of the ongoing case against five men charged in federal court with plotting to kidnap Whitmer. Last week, defense lawyers rocked the foundation of the high-profile case as they suggested a second FBI agent was attempting to sabotage the defense.

Who is Richard Trask?
Richard Trask, 39, has worked for the FBI since 2011. He testified in federal court about the Whitmer investigation and served as the FBI's public face in the case. The veteran agent is said to have worked on a wide range of cases involving terrorism, espionage, and domestic extremism probes. “It’s the last thing you want for a major case like this,” said Andrew Arena, a former special agent in charge of the FBI’s Detroit office. “Any time you give the defense any ammunition it's not good.”

Meanwhile, FBI spokeswoman Mara Schneider said the bureau is cooperating with the prosecutor's office. "In accordance with FBI policy, the incident is subject to internal review, and I cannot comment further at this time," she said in a statement.

According to Arena, that review would include an investigation by the bureau's internal affairs. “Depending on the severity, it could be a suspension until things are ironed out one way or another,” he explained.

According to social media posts and state business filings obtained by The Detroit News, Trask opened a gym at his rural property in Oshtemo Township near Kalamazoo, where he offers CrossFit training. The special agent is said to have filed paperwork for BCB Health & Wellness last year, and his Instagram account has several photos of him posing shirtless and exercising. At the time of writing, the account had been made private.

Trask is prohibited from possessing a firearm, as part of his bond conditions. “If you can’t carry a weapon, then you’re not going to work as a street agent,” Arena explained. “He’s going to be suspended or put on restricted duty.”

Trask's arrest came one week after the defense team offered a glimpse of their strategy in the kidnapping plot case. According to court filings, defense lawyers attacked the work of FBI agents and claimed informants had entrapped men accused in the conspiracy. The five men accused in the plot are currently awaiting an October trial in federal court in Grand Rapids. One defendant reportedly asked US District Judge Robert Jonker to move the trial out of Michigan, arguing that the media coverage had "corrupted the potential trial atmosphere."

In January, Trask testified in federal court against Delaware resident Barry Croft, accusing him of being the group's bomb maker. Trask said Croft was the national leader of the 3 Percenters, a small militia that was allegedly part of the January 6 US Capitol riots. Trask provided context about several undercover recordings that portrayed Croft as a violent extremist. On the other hand, defense lawyers portrayed their clients as tough talkers who never carried out any kidnapping plot but were simply exercising their First Amendment rights.

“Croft was saying he was granted permission from God to commit murder, correct?” Assistant US Attorney Nils Kessler asked Trask in court. “Correct,” the FBI agent responded.

Trask was expected to play an instrumental role in the October trial of the five men accused in the Whitmer plot. “In an investigation like this, you’re always trying to ensure you have more than one person who can testify about that piece of evidence,” Arena said. “So if something happens, you’ve got a backup.”

Meanwhile, the defense has also raised concerns about the other lead investigator, FBI Special Agent Henrik Impola, accusing him of trying to sabotage defense teams. Joshua Blanchard, a lawyer for co-defendant Barry Croft, revealed a recording that reportedly had Impola plotting "disarray and chaos" against defense lawyers, whom he labeled "paid liars".
















FBI agent in Gretchen Whitmer kidnapping case faces charges
Washington Times
July 19, 2021


KALAMAZOO, Mich. — An FBI agent who testified about an alleged plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is facing an assault charge, according to court records.

Richard Trask appeared in a Kalamazoo court Monday and was released. Online records show the alleged offense occurred Sunday.

The court file doesn’t list a defense attorney yet, according to the clerk’s office.

“In accordance with FBI policy, the incident is subject to internal review, and I cannot comment further at this time,” Detroit FBI spokeswoman Mara Schneider said. 

Trask has provided details in federal court about an alleged scheme to kidnap Whitmer in retaliation for her orders last year meant to slow the spread of the coronavirus. One man has pleaded guilty and roughly a dozen others are awaiting trial.

“It’s the last thing you want for a major case like this,” said Andy Arena, former head of the FBI office in Detroit. “Any time you give the defense any ammunition it’s not good.”

Trask can’t carry a gun while he‘s out on bond, The Detroit News reported.
















FBI agent in Whitmer kidnap case arrested following domestic incident
The Detroit News
July 19, 2021




The arrest of an FBI agent credited with helping thwart a plot to kidnap and kill Gov. Gretchen Whitmer complicates one of the most closely watched cases of violent extremism that is becoming increasingly focused on allegations of wrongdoing by investigators.

FBI Special Agent Richard Trask, 39, of Kalamazoo, was charged Monday with assault with intent to do great bodily harm, less than murder following a domestic incident with his wife Sunday. He was released on a $10,000 personal recognizance bond following an arraignment in 8th District Court in Kalamazoo and faces a charge punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

His arrest comes at a critical juncture in the criminal case against five men charged in federal court with plotting to kidnap Whitmer. Defense lawyers last week leveled a broad attack on the foundation of the high-profile case and suggested a second FBI agent was trying to sabotage defense teams.

Trask, 39, has worked for the FBI since 2011 and served as the FBI's public face in the Whitmer case, testifying in federal court about the investigation. He has worked on cases involving espionage, terrorism and domestic extremism investigations.

“It’s the last thing you want for a major case like this,” said Andrew Arena, former special agent in charge of the FBI’s Detroit office. “Any time you give the defense any ammunition it's not good.”

Details about the incident were not available. Trask did not respond to a message seeking comment Monday and there was no defense lawyer listed in court records.

FBI spokeswoman Mara Schneider said the bureau is cooperating with the prosecutor's office. Trask's job status was unclear Monday.

"In accordance with FBI policy, the incident is subject to internal review, and I cannot comment further at this time," she said in a statement.

That review would include an investigation by FBI internal affairs, Arena said.

“Depending on the severity, it could be a suspension until things are ironed out one way or another,” Arena said.

Aside from his FBI duties, Trask opened a gym at his rural property in Oshtemo Township near Kalamazoo and offers CrossFit training, according to social media posts and state business filings. He filed state paperwork for BCB Health & Wellness last year and maintains an active Instagram account showing him exercising, flexing and posing shirtless.

As part of his bond conditions, Trask is prohibited from possessing a firearm.

“If you can’t carry a weapon, then you’re not going to work as a street agent,” Arena said. “He’s going to be suspended or put on restricted duty.”

Trask was arrested one week after defense lawyers provided the clearest view of how they plan to attack the kidnapping plot case.

Court filings revealed a defense strategy that involves suppressing evidence, attacking the work of FBI agents and claiming FBI informants entrapped men accused in the conspiracy. Five men are awaiting an October trial in federal court in Grand Rapids, though one defendant has asked U.S. District Judge Robert Jonker to move the trial out of Michigan, arguing media conduct and coverage had "corrupted the potential trial atmosphere."

The arrest is the second potential problem in the case to emerge in recent months.

In March, prosecutors indicted an informant who sources say helped the FBI infiltrate the alleged conspiracy, a rare legal development. The indictment of Wisconsin resident Stephen Robeson after a prolonged period of cooperation suggests the relationship between Robeson and the FBI is destroyed and that prosecutors do not plan on using him at trial, legal experts said.

But defense lawyers can try to call him as a witness and attack Robeson's credibility.

Trask testified in federal court in January against Delaware resident Barry Croft, an accused plotter who is portrayed as the group’s bomb maker. Trask identified Croft as the national leader of the 3 Percenters, a small militia that participated in the Jan. 6 insurgence at the U.S. Capitol.

During the court hearing, Trask helped provide context about multiple undercover recordings that included Croft. At the time, prosecutors wanted Croft held without bond, saying he was a violent extremist.

Defense lawyers have portrayed their clients as tough talkers who were exercising their First Amendment rights who never carried out any kidnapping plot.

“Croft was saying he was granted permission from God to commit murder, correct?” Assistant U.S. Attorney Nils Kessler asked the FBI agent.

“Correct,” Trask said.

Trask would be expected to play a central role in an October trial of five men in federal court in Grand Rapids.

“In an investigation like this, you’re always trying to ensure you have more than one person who can testify about that piece of evidence,” Arena said. “So if something happens, you’ve got a backup.”

Defense lawyers have raised questions about the other lead investigator, FBI Special Agent Henrik Impola.

Impola came under defense scrutiny earlier this month after a lawyer for co-defendant Barry Croft suggested Impola was trying to sabotage defense teams.

Croft's lawyer Joshua Blanchard revealed the existence of a recording in which Impola discussed creating "disarray and chaos" for defense lawyers, whom he labeled "paid liars."
















FBI agent who testified in Whitmer kidnap faces assault charge in Kalamazoo County
MLive
Jul 19, 2021



KALAMAZOO, MI – An FBI agent was charged with felony assault in Kalamazoo County Monday.

Richard Trask was arraigned July 19 in Kalamazoo County District Court on one felony count of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder, court records show.

Trask is the lead agent in the case against the people accused of plotting to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

The alleged assault happened July 18, records show.

Trask, an Oshtemo Township resident, was granted a personal recognizance bond. He is not allowed to return to his home address as part of his bond conditions.

Trask is not allowed to possess a gun while out on bond, records show.

He requested a preliminary examination, which is not yet scheduled, court records show.



























FBI Agent Richard Trask - Connection To Investigation Of Governor Whitmer Kidnapping Plot:
Kidnapping plot included leaving Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in boat in Lake Michigan, FBI says
MLive
Oct 13, 2020




GRAND RAPIDS, MI – An FBI special agent testified Tuesday, Oct. 13, that a leader of a group plotting to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer considered leaving Whitmer in a boat in the middle of Lake Michigan.

Adam Fox, 37, identified by the FBI as a leader of a group, said the group considered taking Whitmer to the middle of the lake then disabling the boat’s motor, FBI special agent Richard Trask II testified.

Trask also revealed in his testimony that the group had talked about kidnapping Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam. The alleged plan was in response to Northam’s lockdown orders over the coronavirus, Trask said. The defendants were allegedly upset by Whitmer’s response to COVID-19.

Fox, along with Ty Garbin, 24, Kaleb Franks, 26, Daniel Harris, 23, and Brandon Caserta, 32, are undergoing preliminary examinations and detention hearings before U.S. Magistrate Judge Sally Berens.

She is expected to rule on bond requests this afternoon. The preliminary examination will resume on Friday.

Barry Croft, also described as a leader, has a hearing Tuesday afternoon in U.S. District Court in Delaware.

The attorneys for several defendants suggested that their clients were followers and didn’t play significant roles in the planning. They contended that their clients would not have followed through.

“Big talk?” Caserta’s attorney, Michael Darragh Hills, asked.

Trask said: “I can speculate, but that’s it.”

Defense attorneys also alleged their clients were pressured to go along with the plan by a man working for the government.

Seven others are facing anti-terrorism charges in state courts. They are accused of planning to storm the state Capitol and start a bloody civil war.

“The group talked about creating a society that followed the U.S. Bill of Rights and where they could be self-sufficient. They discussed different ways of achieving this goal from peaceful endeavors to violent actions,” Trask wrote in a criminal complaint.

He said that the group identified state governments, including Michigan’s, that they believed violated the U.S. Constitution.

In a effort to increase their numbers, they were encouraged to share their message with neighbors. Fox reached out to a Michigan-based militia, the FBI agent said.

“Fox said he needed ’200′ men to storm the Capitol building in Lansing, Michigan, and take hostages, including the Governor,” Trask wrote.

“Fox explained they would try the Governor of Michigan for ‘treason,’ and he said they would execute the plan before the November 2020 elections.”

Fox invited others to a meeting at what was described as his business, Vac Shack Vacuums in Wyoming. Fox did not own the business. He worked there. The owner, Brian Titus, let him stay there because he had no place to live. Titus was angry that Fox used his business to allegedly plan the governor’s kidnapping.

On June 18, Fox, Garbin and a confidential source met in Lansing for a Second Amendment rally. Fox asked them to join forces in an attack on the Capitol, the FBI said.

Two days later, they met at Vac Shack. The FBI said participants had "access through a trap door hidden under a rug on the main floor to enter the basement. The owner disputed that characterization and said the floor opened to the stairs to the basement in the old building.

There was talk about assaulting police and destroying patrol cars with Molotov cocktails. On June 25, Fox did a live-stream video to a private Facebook group. He allegedly complained about the judicial system and government for closing gyms during the coronavirus crisis.

He called Whitmer a “tyrant … .”

Three days later, Fox, his girlfriend, Garbin, Franks and Caserta attended tactical training exercise at the Munith home of militia group member. Franks left early, the FBI said.

He later said he was “'not cool with offensive kidnapping,'” the FBI said.

But he allegedly continued with the plot.

Fox, Croft, Harbin, Franks, Caserta and others attended training exercises on July 10, 11, and 12 in Cambria, Wisconsin, the FBI said. Croft tried to make improvised explosive devices but they did not detonate as he hoped, the FBI said.

Franks allegedly had a rifle with a silencer.

A week later, several met in Ohio for a meeting. They discussed attacking Michigan State Police facilities, the FBI said. Garbin suggested shooting up the governor’s vacation home. He didn’t want to go to the Capitol.

They had a meeting at the Vac Shack in Wyoming on July 27, the FBI said.

Fox said the best chance for abducting Whitmer was when she was arriving at, or leaving, her vacation home or the governor’s official summer residence.

Fox allegedly described the plan as “Snatch and grab, man. Grab the … Governor. Just grab the … Because at that point, we do that, dude -- it’s over.”

He said they would take her to a secure location in Wisconsin for a “trial.”

In a July 27 encrypted group chat, which included Garbin, Harris, Franks and the confidential source, Fox allegedly asked how others felt about the kidnapping. No one responded.

In early September, several members in three vehicles conducted surveillance of Whitmer’s summer home in Northern Michigan.



Wednesday, June 23, 2021

06232021 - Hayden Jagst Criminal Case - Murder Of Father/Officer Edward Jagst (June 21, 2021)




















Hearing Set For Brighton Teen Charged In Father's Murder
WHMI News
March 1, 2022



A Brighton teen charged with the shooting death of his father is scheduled to appear in court next week.

18-year-old Hayden Jagst is charged with open murder, two counts of felony firearm, carrying with unlawful intent, and carrying a concealed weapon for the June 21st, 2021 murder of his father, 48-year-old Edward Jagst, a Canton Township Police officer.

A report from the Michigan Center for Forensic Psychiatry earlier determined he was competent to stand trial and his case was bound over to Livingston County Circuit Court for further proceedings.

Records show that he is scheduled to appear for a pre-trial hearing before Judge Michael Hatty on March 11th.

Edward Jagst was found by Brighton Police officers who had been summoned to the family’s Woodlake Drive home by Jagst’s teenage daughter. The daughter identified her 18-year-old brother as the shooter and said he had threatened to kill himself before leaving the home. The son was later convinced to return to Brighton, where he was taken into custody. A motive has not been disclosed.

If convicted, Hayden Jagst faces up to life in prison.
























Brighton Teen Competent To Stand Trial In Father's Murder
November 22, 2021
WHMI FM Radio


A report has determined that a Brighton teen charged with the shooting death of his father is competent to stand trial.

18-year-old Hayden Jagst is charged with open murder, two counts of felony firearm, carrying with unlawful intent, and carrying a concealed weapon for the June 21st murder of his father, 48-year-old Edward Jagst a Canton Township Police officer.

In court last week, Jagst waived a preliminary hearing after a report from the Michigan Center for Forensic Psychiatry determined he was competent to stand trial. A criminal responsibility assessment is still pending. However, his case was bound over to Livingston County Circuit Court for further proceedings.

Edward Jagst was found by Brighton Police officers who had been summoned to the family’s Woodlake Drive home by Jagst’s teenage daughter. The daughter identified her 18-year-old brother as the shooter and said he had threatened to kill himself before leaving the home. The son was later convinced to return to Brighton, where he was taken into custody.

A motive has not been disclosed. If convicted, Hayden Jagst faces up to life in prison.

















18-year-old Brighton man charged with killing father found competent, headed to trial
Livingston Daily
November 19, 2021
An 18-year-old Brighton man charged with killing his father is headed to trial. 

Hayden Jagst waived a preliminary hearing Tuesday, sending the case to circuit court, after the state's forensic center determined he was competent to stand trial. 

A criminal responsibility assessment by the Michigan Center for Forensic Psychiatry is still pending. 

Kristina Dunne, Hayden Jagst's attorney, declined to comment. 

Police said Hayden Jagst killed Edward Jagst, a Canton Township police officer, at the family's home June 21. 

He is charged with open murder, two counts of felony firearm, carrying with unlawful intent and carrying a concealed weapon. 

Officers found Edward Jagst dead in his bed with a gunshot wound, Brighton Police Detective Michael Arntz testified in a hearing earlier this year.

Future court dates are not available. 
















Competency exam ordered for son in death - Hearing next week
Plymouth Voice
August 21, 2021




The son of a Canton Township police officer ordered to undergo a court-ordered psychiatric examination to determine his competency to stand trial in his father’s death is scheduled to appear for a review hearing before Livingston County District Court Judge Daniel Bain on Tuesday, Aug. 24.

Bain ordered the competency examination during a court hearing July 13 to determine whether Hayden Jagst, 18, can be found criminally responsible for the death of his father, Edward Jagst, who was found dead in his bed at the family home June 21.

Brighton police officers responded to the Jagst home in the 300 block of Woodlake Drive in Brighton in response to a 911 call June 21 from the wife of the deceased, a veteran police officer.

Brighton Police Det. Michael Arntz testified in a court hearing that during the 911 call, the caller said her daughter told her that Hayden Jagst had shot his father in the head. Responding officers found Edward Jagst dead in his bed from a gunshot wound, according to Arntz. Hayden Jagst had left the home when officers arrived but police reached him by phone and convinced him to return to Brighton where he was taken into custody without incident, according to Arntz.

Hayden Jagst is charged with open murder, two counts of felony firearm, carrying with unlawful intent and carrying a concealed weapon. If found competent to stand trial and convicted, he faces up to life in prison.















18-year-old man charged with killing father to undergo evaluation at state forensics center
Livingston Daily
July 13, 2021
The state's forensics center will determine if an 18-year-old Brighton man charged with shooting and killing his father is capable of standing trial, a judge ordered Tuesday. 

Police said Hayden Jagst killed Edward Jagst, a Canton Township police officer, at the family's home June 21. 

He is charged with open murder, two counts of felony firearm, carrying with unlawful intent and carrying a concealed weapon. 

Hayden Jagst will undergo an evaluation at the Center for Forensic Psychiatry to determine if he is competent to stand trial and can be found criminally responsible, according to an order Livingston County District Court Judge Daniel Bain signed. 

Officers with the Brighton Police Department responded to a home in the 300 block of Woodlake Drive in Brighton after receiving a 911 call from the wife of the victim,  Brighton Police Detective Michael Arntz testified in a hearing last month.

The wife told the dispatcher her teenage daughter told her Hayden Jagst shot her husband in the head, Arntz testified.  

Hayden Jagst had left the home by the time officers arrived.

Officers found Edward Jagst dead in his bed with a gunshot wound, the detective said. 

Police negotiated with the Hayden Jagst on the telephone and convinced him to return to Brighton, officials said. He was taken into custody without incident on Murphy Drive near Challis.

Hayden Jagst is scheduled to appear in front of Livingston County District Court Judge Daniel Bain for a review hearing on Aug. 24.  

He faces up to life in prison if convicted of murder.
















Funeral Services Announced for Canton Police Officer Murdered by Son
Michigan Headlines
JUN 24, 2021

CANTON, MI – Funeral Services for Canton Police Officer Edward Jagst, who was shot and killed in the family home by his 18-year-old son Hayden Jagst, have been announced.

Hayden Jagst has been formally charged with Open murder, Two counts of Felony Firearm, Carrying with Unlawful Intent and Carrying a Concealed Weapon. Jagst was on probation at the time that he shot and killed his father. He has a previous conviction of possession of burglary tools.

Shortly before 10:30 a.m. on Monday June 21st, 2021, a call was placed to Livingston County Central 911 Dispatch by the daughter of Edward Jagst. She told the 911 dispatcher that her 18-year-old brother had just shot her father. Officers raced to the family home on Woodlake Dr in Brighton. When they arrived they found Edward Jagst had been fatally shot in his own bed.

Obituary of Edward Jagst
June 22, 2021, Canton, MI – Canton Police Department mourns the loss of Officer Edward Jagst, age 48, who was killed in his home yesterday.

Officer Jagst, a 21-year veteran with the department, was an active patrol officer who participated in several special units including Evidence Technician, Training Instructor, Bicycle Unit, and as a Criminal Investigations Detective. He also proudly served on the department’s Honor Guard, standing watch over formal ceremonies for 16 years.

Most notably, Ed made his mark during the years he served as a School Resource Officer at the Plymouth Canton Educational Park. He was an inspiring and jovial addition to the Park—adored by the students, faculty and parents alike.

Ed was one of the kindest, most compassionate officers to ever wear the Canton Police badge. He made an impact on those around him in every aspect, whether it be interacting with co-workers, assisting citizens in need, or just chatting with those he came in contact with throughout his day.

“Officer Jagst was a remarkable man who was strong in his faith, and was a truly loving husband and father,” said Police Chad Baugh. “He was a shining example of love and service, and our Canton Police family, past and present, consider ourselves fortunate to have known him. Our hearts go out to the Jagst family at this time of tragedy,” Baugh adds.

A Go Fund Me account has been established to assist the family with costs for the funeral service and other expenses. 

MEMORIAL VISITATION
Keehn-Griffin Funeral Home
Monday, June 28, 2021
4:00 PM – 7:00 PM
706 W. Main Street, Brighton, Michigan 48116

MEMORIAL MASS
St. Patrick Catholic Church
Tuesday, June 29, 2021
10:30 AM
711 Rickett Road, Brighton, MI 48116

















18-year-old murders police officer dad with rifle shot to the head: Report
CrimeOnline.com
June 24, 2021


An 18-year-old Michigan man was ordered held without bond on Wednesday when he appeared in court on charges that he shot and killed his father.

Hayden Jagst is charged with open murder, two counts of felony firearm, carrying with unlawful intent, and carrying a concealed weapon in the death of Edward Jagst at the family home Monday morning.

Officers responding to a 911 call at the Brighton home found Edward Jagst, a Canton Township police officer, dead in his bed with a gunshot wound to the head, the Livingston Daily reported.

The younger man had fled the scene in his car by the time police arrived, as CrimeOnline previously reported. Brighton police called him on the phone and convinced him to surrender.

Brighton Police Detective Michael Arntz testified on Wednesday that officers found a loaded .22-caliber rifle in the trunk of Hayden Jagst’s Ford Focus.

Jagst made “several admissions that he was involved in the shooting of his father,” Arntz said.

The teen was previously arraigned on a probation violation on Tuesday.

He faces up to life in prison if convicted on the murder charge.

According to his obituary, Edward Jagst was a 21-year veteran of the Canton Township Police Department and had been an evidence technician, training instructor, criminal investigations detective, and a member of the department’s honor guard.

“Officer Jagst was a remarkable man who was strong in his faith, and was a truly loving husband and father,” said Chad Baugh, director of police services in Canton. “He was a shining example of love and service, and our Canton Police family, past and present, consider ourselves fortunate to have known him. Our hearts go out to the Jagst family at this time of tragedy.”


















Son formally charged in father's murder in Brighton
Jun 23, 2021
Click On Detroit | Local 4 | WDIV


Son formally charged in father's murder in Brighton

















Michigan police officer's 18-year-old son accused of killing him
FOX 2 News Detroit
June 23, 2021


Amid the heartbreak being felt in Plymouth Canton schools over the killing of Edward Jagst, the 21-year veteran of the Canton Police Department and popular school resource officer is being remembered for his kindness, humor, and service.

Detroit news, weather, traffic, sports and more from FOX 2 Detroit. Serving all of Michigan with break news, live streams, and latest videos from FOX 2.
















Arraignment of Hayden Jagst
Jon King
Jun 23, 2021

















Teen accused of killing father in Brighton charged, denied bond
WXYZ News - Detroit
Jun 23, 2021



BRIGHTON, Mich. (WXYZ) — An 18-year-old from Brighton is facing several charges in connection to his father's death.

Hayden Jagst, 18, is charged with homicide, open murder, felony firearms, carrying a dangerous weapon with unlawful intent, and carrying a concealed weapon.

He was denied bond by a judge.

Jagst is accused in the death of his father, Edward Jagst, a Canton Township police officer. Edward was found in his bed with a gunshot wound Monday morning. The daughter of the victim called police, stating that her brother had shot and killed her father and was then planning to kill himself.

No motive has been given in the shooting because the suspect hasn't made any statements. He's currently being housed at Livingston County Jail.
















Officer allegedly slain by son was 21-year police veteran, family man
MLive
Jun 23, 2021



BRIGHTON, MI – Canton police officer Edward Jagst was a dedicated family man and police veteran, serving 21 years on the force until his tragic death Monday morning.

Jagst, 48, was killed June 21, when he was allegedly shot by his 18-year-old son inside his Brighton home, according to the Canton Police Department.

“Officer Jagst was a remarkable man who was strong in his faith and was a truly loving husband and father,” Canton Police Chief Chad Baugh said. “He was a shining example of love and service and our Canton police family, past and present, consider ourselves fortunate to have known him. Our hearts go out to the Jagst family at this time of tragedy.”

Police were called to Jagst’s home at 10:28 a.m. Monday by his teenage daughter who told emergency dispatchers her brother, 18, had shot her father and was going to kill himself, according to the Brighton Police Department.

Officers arrived to find Jagst dead in his bed from a gunshot wound, police said.

His son, the suspected shooter, is currently lodged in the Livingston County Jail awaiting charges and arraignment. There is no clear motive for the shooting which remains under investigation, police said.

“We want to thank all the departments that assisted with this tragedy and our hearts go out to the family and the entire Canton Township Police Department for the loss of such a well-respected man and officer,” Brighton Police Chief Rob Bradford said.

Jagst served in various roles in his 21 years on the police force, including evidence technician, training instructor, bicycle unit officer and criminal investigations detective.

He also served on the department’s honor guard, standing watch over formal ceremonies for 16 years.

Jagst also was a school resource officer at the Plymouth Canton Educational Park, where he was an inspiring and jovial addition to the Park and adored by students, faculty and parents, police said.

“Ed was one of the kindest, most compassionate officers to ever wear the Canton police badge,” according to a Canton Police Department statement. “He made an impact on those around him in every aspect, whether it be interacting with co-workers, assisting citizens in need or just chatting with those he came in contact with throughout his day.”
















18-year-old Brighton man charged with killing father who was Canton Twp. police officer
Livingston Daily
June 23, 2021
A 18-year-old Brighton man is being held without bond after being charged with shooting and killing his father. 

Hayden Jagst appeared via Zoom in Livingston County Magistrate Jerry Sherwood's courtroom, Wednesday for his arraignment. 

He is charged with open murder, two counts of felony firearm, carrying with unlawful intent and carrying a concealed weapon. 

Police say he killed his father, Edward Jagst, a Canton Township police officer, at the family's home Monday morning. 

Officers with the Brighton Police Department responded to a home in the 300 block of Woodlake Drive in Brighton after receiving a 911 call from the wife of the victim,  Brighton Police Detective Michael Arntz testified in a hearing Wednesday afternoon.

The wife told the dispatcher her teenage daughter told her Hayden Jagst shot her husband in the head, Arntz testified.  

Brighton Police previously said the teenage daughter was the one that had called police. 

Hayden Jagst had left the home by the time officers arrived.

Officers found Edward Jagst dead in his bed with a gunshot wound, the detective said. 

Police negotiated with the Hayden Jagst on the telephone and convinced him to return to Brighton, officials said. He was taken into custody without incident on Murphy Drive near Challis.

A loaded .22-caliber rifle was found in the trunk of the Ford Focus, Arntz said. 

He said during a conversation with officers Hayden Jagst made "several admissions that he was involved in the shooting of his father."

Hayden Jagst was arraigned on a probation violation at Tuesday morning by Livingston County Circuit Court Judge Suzanne Geddis. 

He was on probation for a previous conviction of possession of burglary tools, Geddis said. 

Hayden Jagst is scheduled to appear in front of Livingston County District Court Judge Daniel Bain for a probable cause conference on July 6. 

He faces up to life in prison if convicted of murder.

A GoFundMe campaign set up for Edward Jagst's wife and daughter had raised more than $12,000 as of Wednesday afternoon. 
















Canton police officer allegedly killed by son, was beloved in the community
FOX 2 Detroit
June 23, 2021




FOX 2 - Amid the heartbreak being felt in Plymouth Canton schools over the killing of Edward Jagst, the 21-year veteran of the Canton Police Department and popular school resource officer is being remembered for his kindness and service.

Jagst was found shot to death Monday, allegedly at the hands of his 18-year-old son Hayden Jagst inside their Brighton home.

"He still had so much more time to live, he had so much life ahead of him," said Ryan Triolet.

Triolet says at Plymouth Canton Educational Park everyone knew Edward Jagst, 48, as a kind police officer who always made people laugh, according to Triolet, a 2018 Canton High School graduate.

"He was one of those people that just really embodied what a police officer should be in my opinion, especially with all that’s been going on - with the public opinion of the police - he was one of the good ones," he said. "You almost expect to hear of officers killed in the line of duty but to hear it happening in their own home by a family member it’s just a whole new level of shock."

On Wednesday afternoon Hayden Jagst stayed mostly silent when he went before a judge for the first time. Hayden now faces multiple charges including open murder and is being held without bond.

"He definitely always seemed to me as a family man and it seems like he got along pretty well with his family from what he told me," said Triolet. "So it definitely made it a lot more shocking."

Eriksson Elementary Principal Kevin Learned says Jagst's service went beyond the district's high schools. He also spent a decade teaching safety lessons to second and fifth-graders.

"He was very kind, very gentle, very supportive of our community, and he’ll definitely be missed," said Learnned. "He was always opening to answering questions. As you can imagine, elementary-age kids have some doozies sometimes. But he was always welcoming of those questions and answer them in a very kind and understanding way."

A GoFundMe has been established for the family. To donate CLICK HERE

Now as the community comes to terms with the stunning loss, they want Jagst's family to know they are standing behind them.

"During his lifetime he helped out a lot of people, he improved a lot of people's days," Triolet said. "He put smiles on people's faces when they were having the worst day of their life and he was always just a such a respectful, good human being and of course an amazing police officer - but also a genuinely good person."
















GoFundMe Launched For Canton Police Officer Killed Monday
The page seeks to raise money for the family of Edward Jagst, a Canton police officer who was killed at his home Monday
Patch
Jun 23, 2021



CANTON, MI — A GoFundMe has been launched for the family of Edward Jagst, a Canton police officer who was killed Monday at his home in Brighton. He was 48.

As of 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, the GoFundMe page had raised more than $10,000 of its $15,000 goal. It was launched by Mary Ann Boyle.

"Following the tragedy they just experienced, all proceeds will be going directly to the family through these troubling times for her mortgage, car payments and bills," the GoFundMe page reads.

Jagst was shot and killed by his 18-year-old son in his Brighton home Monday morning, MLive reported. He was a 21-year veteran of the Canton Police Department, participating in various units, including as a school resource officer, officials said.

"Officer Jagst was a remarkable man who was strong in his faith, and was a truly loving husband and father," Canton Police Chief Chad Baugh said Patch in a statement Tuesday. "He was a shining example of love and service, and our Canton Police family, past and present, consider ourselves fortunate to have known him. Our hearts go out to the Jagst family at this time of tragedy."

Jagst was found dead around 10:30 a.m. Monday by police after officers were dispatched for a reported shooting, according to MLive.

Jagst's teenage daughter called 911 and told dispatchers her brother had shot her father and was going to kill himself, MLive reported.

The suspect eventually turned himself in, the outlet reported, citing police.

The top donation on the GoFundMe was $1,000 from an anonymous donor. Several other people who donated also commented on the page.

"I cannot stop thinking about you and your daughter. My heart hurts so badly for you. Know that SO MANY are holding you up in love and prayer," said one donor, Mandy Smith.

"I'm so very sorry for your loss, I can't even imagine what you are feeling! My love and prayers are for all of you. May your wonderful memories of him comfort you and Alli!" said Candace Nehring.
























Beloved Canton police officer killed in Brighton home; son in custody
Click On Detroit | Local 4 | WDIV
Jun 22, 2021


Beloved Canton police officer killed in Brighton home; son in custody

















EDWARD DIRK JAGST OBITUARY
September 30, 1972 - June 21, 2021




June 22, 2021, Canton, MI – Canton Police Department mourns the loss of Officer Edward Jagst, age 48, who was killed in his home yesterday.

Officer Jagst, a 21-year veteran with the department, was an active patrol officer who participated in several special units including Evidence Technician, Training Instructor, Bicycle Unit, and as a Criminal Investigations Detective. He also proudly served on the department’s Honor Guard, standing watch over formal ceremonies for 16 years.

Most notably, Ed made his mark during the years he served as a School Resource Officer at the Plymouth Canton Educational Park. He was an inspiring and jovial addition to the Park—adored by the students, faculty and parents alike.

Ed was one of the kindest, most compassionate officers to ever wear the Canton Police badge. He made an impact on those around him in every aspect, whether it be interacting with co-workers, assisting citizens in need, or just chatting with those he came in contact with throughout his day.

“Officer Jagst was a remarkable man who was strong in his faith, and was a truly loving husband and father,” said Police Chad Baugh. “He was a shining example of love and service, and our Canton Police family, past and present, consider ourselves fortunate to have known him. Our hearts go out to the Jagst family at this time of tragedy,” Baugh adds.
































































Canton Twp. police officer allegedly slain by son at Brighton home
The Detroit News
June 22, 2021



Canton Township — A Canton Township police officer was killed Monday at his home in Brighton, allegedly by his son, police said.

The Canton Township police department announced Tuesday the death of Officer Edward Jagst, a 21-year veteran of the department. He was 48.

It was just before 10:30 a.m. Monday when officers from the Brighton Police Department were dispatched to the 300 block of Woodlake Drive. That's north of Lee and west of Ricketts.

They responded to a 911 call from the victim's daughter, who said her brother had shot her father, and was threatening to kill himself. 

Police found Jagst shot dead in his bed. 

Brighton police say the suspect fled in a blue Ford Focus, and police were able to talk him into turning himself in. Michigan State Police and Livingston County deputies surveilled the suspect as he surrendered. The gun police believe was used in the shooting was in his vehicle, police said.

Police say the suspect has made no statements, and they do not know a motive in the shooting. He has not been named, as he has not yet been arraigned.

Jagst served on the department's honor guard for 16 years, and had been a school resource officer at Plymouth Canton Educational Park. He also had been a criminal investigations detective.

In 2016, Jagst was among a trio of Canton Township school resource officers honored with the Model Agency Award by the National Association of School Resource Officers. Canton was just one of five agencies to be so honored that year.


















Canton Township police officer identified as man shot and killed in Brighton on Monday
Livingston Daily
June 22, 2021



A 48-year-old man was shot and killed in his Brighton home Monday morning, police said in a press release. 

Police have identified the man as Edward Jagst, a Canton Township police officer.

Officers with the Brighton Police Department responded to a home in the 300 block of Woodlake Drive in Brighton after receiving a 911 call from the teenage daughter of the victim, according to a press release.

Officials said the girl told the dispatcher her brother shot and killed her dad and was going to kill himself.

The 18-year-old son had left the home by the time officers arrived.

Officers found Jagst dead in his bed with a gunshot wound, according to the release.

Police negotiated with the son on the telephone and convinced him to return to Brighton, officials said. He was taken into custody without incident on Murphy Drive near Challis.

A weapon was found in the vehicle and will undergo testing, officials said. 

Officials are not releasing the son's name pending charges and he is lodged in the Livingston County Jail pending arraignment. 

The son was arraigned on a probation violation at 11:30 a.m. by Livingston County Circuit Court Judge Suzanne Geddis. 

He was on probation for a previous conviction of possession of burglary tools, Geddis said. 

Longtime police officer
Jagst worked for the Canton department for 21 years, Canton Township Police Chief Chad Baugh said.

"He was the kindest, most compassionate officer who had ever wore our police badge," he said. 

Jagst was an active patrol officer who participated in several special units including evidence technician, training instructor, bicycle unit, and as a criminal investigations detective.

Baugh said Jagst worked as a school resource officer at the Plymouth Canton Educational Park for several years. 

“Plymouth-Canton Community Schools is deeply saddened by the unexpected death of Officer Ed Jagst, who served the students, families, and staff at Plymouth-Canton Educational Park for several years as one of our valued School Resource Officers,” Monica L. Merritt, superintendent for Plymouth-Canton Community Schools said in an email. 

"Officer Jagst made an incredibly positive impact on the lives of countless students and staff during his time with P-CCS. He will be fondly remembered for his passionate dedication to our school community, his engaging and fun personality, and his endless commitment to ensuring the safety and well-being of all students, every day.”

Jagst also served on the department’s Honor Guard, standing watch over formal ceremonies for 16 years.

Baugh was Jagst's training officer when he first joined the department.

“Officer Jagst was a remarkable man who was strong in his faith, and was a truly loving husband and father,” Baugh said. “He was a shining example of love and service, and our Canton Police family, past and present, consider ourselves fortunate to have known him. Our hearts go out to the Jagst family at this time of tragedy,” Baugh adds.


















Canton Police officer shot and killed by son in Brighton home, police say
MLive
Jun 22, 2021



BRIGHTON, MI – A Canton police officer was shot and killed Monday morning in his Brighton home by his 18-year-old son, police said.

At 10:28 a.m. June 21, police were called to a home in the 300 block of Woodlake Drive in Brighton for a reported shooting, according to the Brighton Police department.

The victim’s teenage daughter had called 911 and told emergency dispatchers her brother had shot her father and was going to kill himself, police said.

Police arrived to find Canton police officer Edward Jagst, 48, dead in his bed from a gunshot wound, police said, adding that the 18-year-old shooting suspect had fled the scene prior to police arrival.

The suspect’s mother later arrived at the scene while on the phone with her son and passed it to an officer who was able to talk him into returning to the home and turn himself in, police said.

Michigan State Police and Livingston County Sheriff’s Office units located the suspect and followed him back to the city of Brighton where he was arrested without further incident, police said.

The weapon suspected of being used in the slaying was found in the suspect’s car and was collected for forensic testing, police said.

There is no clear motive for the shooting which remains under investigation, police said.

The son is currently lodged in the Livingston County Jail awaiting charges and arraignment.

“We want to thank all the departments that assisted with this tragedy and our hearts go out to the family and the entire Canton Township Police Department for the loss of such a well-respected man and officer,” Brighton Police Chief Rob Bradford said.



















18-year-old son in custody after Canton Township police officer killed in Brighton home
Officer worked at Plymouth High School as resource officer
Click On Detroit
June 22, 2021







BRIGHTON, Mich. – Police have released several new details about what they found when responding to a fatal shooting on Woodlake Drive in Brighton on Monday (June 21).

The victim has been identified as Edward Jagst, 48, a Canton Township police officer who worked as the Plymouth High School resource officer.

Jagst’s teenage daughter called 911 and reported that her brother had just shot their father. When officers arrived they found Jagst in bed with a fatal gunshot wound.

Plymouth High School teacher Scott Thomas said it’s still hard to believe what happened to Jagst.

“I think a lot of us are just, we don’t know how to comprehend what happened,” Thomas said. “We gotta take everyday as if it were our last and live everyday to the fullest and appreciate what we have in our lives.”

Jagst’s 18-year-old son fled the scene after the shooting. Officers were able to take Jagst’s son into custody without incident after the teen had a conversation with his mother.

The gun police believe was used in the shooting was found in the car the 18-year-old was driving when he was arrested. The circumstances leading up to the shooting are still unclear.

“He had a huge impact on everybody that came in contact with him. He was what at true friend should be,” Thomas said.

The 18-year-old is still in custody at the Livingston County Jail awaiting arraignment.

“Plymouth-Canton Community Schools is deeply saddened by the unexpected death of Officer Ed Jagst, who served the students, families, and staff at Plymouth-Canton Educational Park for several years as one of our valued School Resource Officers,” said Monica L. Merritt, P-CCS Superintendent of Schools.

Officer Jagst made an incredibly positive impact on the lives of countless students and staff during his time with P-CCS. He will be fondly remembered for his passionate dedication to our school community, his engaging and fun personality, and his endless commitment to ensuring the safety and well-being of all students, every day.

We extend our thoughts and prayers to his family and loved ones during this very difficult time.”
- Plymouth Canton Community Schools
















Victim allegedly shot & killed by son in Brighton was 21-year veteran Canton police officer
WXYZ News - Detroit
Jun 22, 2021



The Canton Police Department is mourning the loss of an officer who was allegedly killed by his 18-year-old son on Monday night.

Edward Jagst, 48, was a 21-year veteran of the department and was an active patrol officer who worked in several units. He was also a school resource officer at the Plymouth Canton Educational Park.

“Officer Jagst was a remarkable man who was strong in his faith, and was a truly loving husband and father,” Police Chad Baugh said in a release. “He was a shining example of love and service, and our Canton Police family, past and present, consider ourselves fortunate to have known him. Our hearts go out to the Jagst family at this time of tragedy."

Neighbors in Brighton were concerned and surprised as police shut down their street, and marked off a home in crime tape. Police say the home is where an 18-year-old son, shot and killed his father.

Police got called to the home around 10:30 a.m., where they found a middle-aged man dead.

Officers said the victim's daughter called police and said her brother killed her dad and was going to kill himself.

The son had already left the scene in his car, and police called him on the phone. They were able to convince him to pull over roughly 3 miles away from the house.

“No police chase, no pursuit, everything was done cordially," Chief Bradford said. "He told us where he was going to be and we were able to get him to pull over and take him into custody without issues.”

Police say they recovered a weapon but haven’t said who the weapon belongs to. They’re still combing over evidence, trying to learn more.

Police said they do not have a motive as the suspect didn't make any statements.
















Father shot and killed by 18-year-old son in Brighton
WXYZ-TV Detroit | Channel 7
Jun 21, 2021


A shooting in Brighton has left one father dead, and police believe his 18-year-old son is the one who pulled the trigger.
















Man found dead inside Brighton home; son turns himself in to police
Click On Detroit | Local 4 | WDIV
Jun 21, 2021



Man found dead inside Brighton home; son turns himself in to police
















Police: 18-year-old Brighton man turns self in after father fatally shot
Neighbors shocked by death: ‘It’s just unbelievable’
Click On Detroit
June 21, 2021

BRIGHTON, Mich. – Residents in a peaceful Brighton neighborhood are shocked by the death of a father who was allegedly killed by his own son.

At some point Monday morning police were called out to the home on Woodlake Drive to find the man dead from a gunshot wound.

“They were great people. I know he was a dedicated cop that worked in the schools in Plymouth. He loved doing that and had some eye surgeries recently that kept him off the force,” said a neighbor who did not want to go on camera.

Neighbors who Local 4 News spoke to say they just spent time with the family weeks ago.

“They were taking a walk one night and they stopped by our house. It’s just unbelievable,” said the anonymous neighbors.

Shortly after police became aware of the situation, the man’s 18-year-old son turned himself in to authorities, police said.

“We were able to, after a long phone conversation with the suspect, we were able to get him to come back and we were able to take him into custody,” said Brighton Police Chief, Rob Bradford.

Police are unclear of the motive, but one thing is certain, the teen just recently finished high school. His graduation photo was still on the front lawn. We’re blurring his face because he’s yet to be charged.

Neighbor, Gerard Page, has teenagers of his own. He can’t even fathom what happened inside the home’s four walls.

“I got four kids myself and I can’t imagine what’s going on with the family right now,” said Page.

Sadly this was a tragedy that no one expected to ever happen.

“It’s a quiet neighborhood. Everybody knows everybody here. It’s unfortunate,” said Chief Bradford.

“You always hate to see it so close to home. You know, it happens and it hurts everyone. But today, it hurts us,” said the anonymous neighbors.
















Michigan dad shot to death by 18-year-old son: Cops
CrimeOnline.com
June 21, 2021



Family members identified the suspect when police arrived at a suburban Detroit home to find a middle-aged man shot dead — it was the man’s 18-year-old son, who had fled the home after the shooting in his car.

Brighton Police said they called the young man on his cell phone and convinced him to pull over and took him into custody about three miles from the crime scene, according to WXYZ.

“No police chase, no pursuit, everything was done cordially,” said Brighton Police Chief Rob Bradford. “He told us where he was going to be and we were able to get him to pull over and take him into custody without issues.”

Bradford said officers retrieved a weapon but haven’t said who it belongs to.

“We still don’t have the information as to why this happened,” Bradford said. “We should know more tomorrow.”

Bradford said investigators were confident they “have the right person in custody.”

Police have not yet named the victim or the suspect, but neighbors said they were stunned.

“Everybody was very nice, nice people,” said Seve Ramos. “They’re outside the yard all the time waving and saying hi.”

As for the suspect, Ramos told the station, “Nice kid. Very nice kid.”

Police said they would identify the suspect when he’s arraigned.