House of Yahweh has Ties to
Anti-government Group Posse Comitatus
Abilene Reporter-News
By RICHARD HORN and LORETTA FULTON
Four men tied to the militant, anti-government Posse
Comitatus of Wisconsin are elders or guards in the House of Yahweh.
One of them, Andrew Glick, is involved in the sect's
security force in Abilene while three others, David Mrotek, Dave
Heimerman and Donald Stenz, operate a House of Yahweh branch in
Manitowoc County, Wis., near the Posse's birthplace.
All four have been associated with Posse Comitatus,
Wisconsin law officials said.
While House of Yahweh followers and spokesmen have
consistently denied to the media that anyone with the sect is associated
with the Posse, two of the men have now confirmed their involvement
but insist they regret their days with the white supremacist group.
"It's a stigma that never goes away," said
Stenz, a carpenter in Manitowoc, Wis.
Glick, 49, who apparently is the only one of the
four who has relocated to Abilene, claims he left the Posse in 1985,
"never to return to them or their teachings."
He has changed his name to Nasayah Yisryal Hawkins,
though Taylor County officials are investigating whether the name
change is legal because Glick was convicted of a Posse-related felony
in Wisconsin a decade ago. Texas law forbids felons from changing
their names.
Mrotek, Heimerman and Stenz come to Abilene primarily
for the thrice-yearly House of Yahweh feasts, the sources say.
The Reporter-News, working with the Green Bay Press-Gazette
in Wisconsin, has looked into ties between the two groups. The Green
Bay paper is publishing a story stating Posse Comitatus members
have joined a "doomsday cult" in Abilene.
Abilene Police Chief Melvin Martin confirms his department
is watching the situation closely.
"We have concern with any extreme right-wing
groups, whether they're under the guise of religion or what have
you, and we want to monitor them," Martin said. "Yeah,
we do have concerns."
Wisconsin law officials say the Posse has dispersed
in recent years, changing its name to Family Farm Preservation.
Some members have joined similar groups, such as the Montana Freemen.
"I don't know how dangerous they're going to
be, but I know they're having more activity down there in Texas,"
said Sgt. Robert Bowman of the Shawano County Sheriff's Department
in Wisconsin.
Asked if the Posse members were considered dangerous
during their active years, Bowman said, "You didn't turn your
back on them."
BURIED GUNS
Ever since news of a rift in the House of Yahweh developed
early this year over Pastor Yisryal Hawkins' teachings, former elders
and followers of the sect have mentioned the involvement of those
associated with the Posse.
These ex-communicants, however, refuse to speak on
the record about the Posse members out of concern for their own
safety and because they say their disagreements are principally
with Yisryal Hawkins.
But officials with the Shawano County sheriff's department
in Wisconsin have confirmed the names of Mrotek, Glick and Heimerman
appear in police intelligence files related to Posse activity. Mrotek,
in particular, was once the "right-hand man" of Posse
founder Jim Wickstrom, said former Shawano County Sheriff's Sgt.
Larry Roth. The group espoused white supremacist views, conducted
paramilitary training drills and advocated anti-government activities
and tax evasion.
In 1985, officials said, a number of Posse members
were driven off a Shawano County, Wis., compound where they had
buried guns, bomb-making equipment and 70,000 rounds of ammunition.
Wickstrom now lives in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan
and recently told reporters militia groups "are not going to
go away - it's all coming to a head and nothing will stop it."
Mrotek, meanwhile, became associated with the House
of Yahweh through the Abilene sect's growing outreach program of
tapes, publications and radio and cable broadcasts.
Former elders and security men with the sect have
consistently maintained Mrotek brought guns and ammunition to Abilene,
where they were packed in barrels with Cosmoline lubricant and buried
underground, supposedly so they'd be available to protect buried
food supplies.
The guns were moved, to a location unknown, in 1993,
following the Branch Davidian raid in Waco, the sources say, because
Yisryal Hawkins feared an FBI raid against his own sect. Mrotek
could not be reached for comment.
Mrotek, Glick and Heimerman's current involvement
with the sect is obvious by their decision to follow Yisryal Hawkins'
teachings that all followers should change their last names to Hawkins
to "bring glory to our Heavenly Father Yahweh." Almost
200 people in Taylor County alone, including Glick and Heimerman,
have obtained name changes in less than a year.
Meanwhile, Mrotek changed his name in February in
Manitowoc, Wis., his hometown. Unlike most followers, who biblicize
their full names, Mrotek changed his to David Israyl Mrotek Hawkins.
SLANDER OF TITLE
Questions have been raised about Glick's name change
because of his Wisconsin record. He was convicted of criminal slander
of title, a felony punishable by up to two years in prison. He served
six months in Manitowoc County Jail.
Criminal slander of title is one of the so-called
"Posse" statutes enacted by the Wisconsin Legislature
in response to litigation by the organization that flooded local
courts.
Posse members, for example, would place frivolous
or fraudulent liens on the property of county officials with whom
they had run-ins, said Chief Investigator Gene Kusche with the Manitowoc
County sheriff's department.
"It sure tied up people's property," he
said, "so the state in its infinite wisdom passed a law against
it."
In Glick's case, he and several other Posse members
were accused of filing declaration of land patent and declaration
of homestead papers that Manitowoc County Prosecutor Denis Vogel
called "false, a sham or frivolous."
The documents claimed the men were entitled to have
original federal land patents updated in their names, nullifying
all transactions on their property since the land patents were issued
more than 100 years ago.
In his appearance before the court, Glick declared
he was indigent because the judge "stole my property and my
home away from me."
Although Glick, in his response to questions last
week, claimed he was convicted without benefit of an attorney, Wisconsin
records show he refused the court-appointed lawyer.
When he filed for a name-change late last year in
Taylor County, Glick reported in a sworn statement that he had no
felony conviction. District Attorney James Eidson said he is investigating
the circumstances around the conviction and the name change. Conceivably
Glick could be charged with perjury.
Glick, however, said he had believed the conviction
was now off his record and that he is trying to correct his mistake.
CONSTITUTION PARTY
Both Glick and Stenz also have political backgrounds
related to the Posse. Both ran for the Wisconsin Assembly in 1982
from different districts under the Constitution Party.
Glick called for an end to state funding for abortion
and replacing the state Department of Natural Resources with local
conservation departments governed by local citizens.
"The power should be brought back to the local
township where it came from," he told the Green Bay Press Gazette
at the time. "If the people of the U.S. would only wake up,
they would hang every bureaucrat from a tree."
Stenz called for state government overhaul, especially
of the Department of Natural Resources, and return of more power
to local control. He also told the Press-Gazette that aliens living
in the Manitowoc area were causing a great amount of unrest.
Today, Stenz says his association with the Posse
was "stupid" and that he lost his building contracting
business because of dealings with the group. He also served 60 days
in jail in 1986 for failing to file income tax returns.
Though he declined to say if he has changed his name
to Hawkins, Stenz says he attends the House of Yahweh in Manitowoc,
where Mrotek and Heimerman advertise themselves in the local paper's
religion section as elders.
Unlike the House of Yahweh sanctuary in Callahan
County, the building in Manitowoc is not tax-exempt. Stenz said
he and the other followers did not want it to be considered a "tax
dodge."
Still, at least one Manitowoc businesswoman contacted
said the House of Yahweh is not highly thought of by locals.
"It's not the kind of people I'd like to go to
church with," she said, refusing to give her name. "It's
Posse people."
As have other followers, Glick denies many of the
rumors surrounding the House of Yahweh in Abilene. He insists guns
are not allowed and that all followers are taught to be peace-loving
and to turn away from violence, anger and hate. He also said the
security force is an unarmed neighborhood watch, looking out for
vandalism.
Nonetheless, ex-members say the sect applied four
years ago to the Texas Board of Private Investigators and Private
Security Agencies to have its 18-man guard commissioned as private
security agents, certified to carry firearms. The application was
denied.
And while a "no firearms" sign is prominently
displayed at the entrance to the Callahan County compound, numerous
former followers say one current member is now certified as a state
instructor to train and provide certification for people wishing
to carry concealed handguns.
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