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When Right-Wing Fundraising Goes Wrong: An Alaska Militia Founder Is Suing His Onetime Benefactors

Alaska militiaman Schaeffer Cox needed help and he knew it.

When an old friend from former Congressman Ron Paul鈥檚 failed presidential campaign offered to raise money for Cox鈥檚 legal defense, he jumped on it.

鈥淚t鈥檚 my hope and prayer that after reading this and seeing the hell my family and I have been through, that you will help me with this 鈥 my LAST chance to prove my innocence 鈥 and return home to my family,鈥 Cox wrote in an Sept. 1, 2014, draft of a fundraising pitch.

Cox, the founder of the Alaska Peacemakers Militia, wrote that letter as he sat in the federal prison in Marion, Illinois, serving a 310-month sentence for an anti-government murder conspiracy聽to kill a state judge and police officers.

Within months, something went awry.

Now, Cox, 34, is suing four people and two companies involved in the 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox鈥 movement, alleging they embezzled more than $100,000 raised in the name of helping Cox get out of prison and beat charges that he conspired to commit murder.

The lawsuit, which Cox filed in October from his cell at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, offers a rare look at how fundraising pitches are made for imprisoned far-right and racist 鈥渁lt-right鈥 activists.

Most prominently, multiple fundraising efforts are ongoing聽for five people arrested and convicted of violence at the racist 鈥淯nite the Right鈥 rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017.

Problems with raising money for the imprisoned don鈥檛 always become public.

But the documents filed in Cox鈥檚 lawsuit give a glimpse of not only how the pitches for money are put together, but also what can happen when the inmate and the people raising money for him have a falling-out.

A fundraising pitch

Cox, a Fairbanks, Alaska, resident, once showed political promise, taking 37 percent of the vote in 2008 in a GOP primary bid to unseat an incumbent Republican member of the state House of Representatives.

He went to prison after being convicted聽in 2012 for a plot to kill, kidnap and terrorize government officials he perceived as enemies of the Alaska Peacekeepers Militia.

Cox was a proponent of Paul鈥檚 Libertarian-focused presidential bid in 2008.

He went on to lead the Alaska Peacemakers Militia, which the Southern Poverty Law Center classified as an anti-government 鈥淧atriot鈥 group.

As he sat in prison in Marion, Illinois, before his transfer to Indiana, Cox heard from Maria Rensel, a Fairbanks, Alaska, friend from the Paul campaign who testified on Cox鈥檚 behalf during the conspiracy trial.

Rensel pitched Cox in the summer of 2014 on the idea of fundraising for a 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox鈥 campaign through an entity called 鈥淎laskans for Liberty.鈥 She put together a team of like-minded folks, including Colorado resident Terry Dodd, Stewart Skrill of Ruskin, Florida, and US Observer, an Oregon-based outfit that publishes stories on people they believe to be wrongly convicted.

Cox knew Rensel, but none of the other board members of 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox.鈥

For Cox鈥檚 part, he鈥檇 have to allow the use of his photo and write letters asking for donations.

Cox signed on, writing fundraising letters addressed 鈥淒ear Patriotic American鈥 from his prison cell asking people for money to help him fight his conviction.

鈥淭his is my cry for help,鈥 Cox wrote in a Sept. 1, 2014, draft fundraising letter. 鈥淣ot just for me and my family, but for Americans like you who may be the government鈥檚 next target.鈥

The agreement allowed Rensel and the board of 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox鈥 to collect money through a fundraising company called , a McLean, Virginia, direct mail company known for working with conservative clients such as the Koch Brothers-funded FreedomWorks and American Border Patrol, which the Southern Poverty Law Center designates as an extremist group.

The first fundraising mailer went out in early 2015, pulling in, according to court documents, $38,000 in donations from 1,500 people.

That鈥檚 when something went awry.

Big projections, big fall

After the first $38,000 came in, Cox and the 鈥淔ree Schaffer Cox鈥 board seemed happy. Eberle Associates predicted that the fundraising efforts could pull in $300,000 over three years.

鈥淭hank you for placing your confidence in us, Maria,鈥 Eberle President Tammy Cali wrote in a letter to Rensel on Feb. 25, 2015. 鈥淲e are truly committed to helping raise critical funding to Schaeffer鈥檚 legal battle.鈥

Eberle wrote a check to 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox鈥 on Feb. 23, 2015, and all seemed to be going well. Mailings went out and Cox penned more fundraising letters from his prison cell in Marion, Illinois.

In an Oct. 5, 2015, draft included as an exhibit in the lawsuit, Cox wrote the prison had the nickname 鈥淟ittle Guantanamo鈥 and the Obama administration had an 鈥渆nemies list.鈥

鈥淎nd since I was the main organizer of the 2nd Amendment lobby in Alaska and represented thousands of conservative voters, I had to go and they didn鈥檛 care how,鈥 Cox wrote.

The fundraising letter echoed a defense Cox used at trial 鈥 that he was a loudmouth who stood up for gun rights, but not a danger.

A jury didn鈥檛 buy the attempt at papering over his extremist activities, convicting Cox of plotting to kill a judge and law enforcement officers, some of whom took part in the two-year investigation that led to his arrest.

Over the next five months, the trust deteriorated between Cox, the 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox鈥 board, Eberle and US Observer. Letters and emails in the court file indicate that Cox wanted more say over the board of 鈥淎laskans for Liberty,鈥 a push the board rejected.

One thing is clear: Cox became wary of the 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox鈥 board members by Feb. 11, 2016. That day, Cox sent an email to Ryan Mobly, a copywriter with Eberle known for handling conservative fundraising pitches and told him to stop the fundraising campaign.

鈥淚鈥檓 just saying I鈥檓 not going to ask people to donate to ME when in reality I have no idea at all where the money is actually going,鈥 Cox wrote. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 reasonable.鈥

Cali put a halt to the fundraising campaign a week later, telling Cox that if he couldn鈥檛 work out his difference with the board, the efforts would end.

In an email filled with biblical references on March 7, 2016, Rensel told Cox his accusations against the board were false and hurting the campaign to raise money for his legal fight.

鈥淧erfect timing Schaeffer 鈥 right when the work is ready to pay off, you self-destruct,鈥 Rensel wrote in an email signed by the other board members.

Emails in the court file show that Rensel and Cox stopped speaking, prompting US Observer to stop researching the case and Eberle to freeze the 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox鈥 account and hold the money.

鈥淲hat a mess!鈥 Cali wrote Cox on Dec. 21, 2016.

Moving on

It is unclear what became of 鈥淎laskans for Liberty,鈥 which initially incorporated in 2012 in Wyoming, and the 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox鈥 movement they ran.

鈥淎laskans for Liberty鈥 had an IRS non-profit designation as recently as 2017, but it is unclear what became of the money it raised under the 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox鈥 banner. Cox said in court records he didn鈥檛 get any of the funds. The group doesn鈥檛 have a website.

聽in 2014. The Southern Poverty Law Center lists the Constitution Party, which spews conspiracy theories and believes the government should be limited to 鈥渋ts Biblical foundation,鈥 as an anti-government group.

Rensel鈥檚 Facebook page was last updated in 2015. She could not be reached for comment.

Since parting with 鈥淎laskans for Liberty,鈥 Cox has a new set of fundraisers known as 鈥淪chaeffer鈥檚 Angels.鈥

The group put together a website as well as an online petition calling for President Donald Trump to pardon Cox, a common move for anti-government groups. The White House closed the petition drive because it garnered only 56 signatures after being created on Aug. 9, 2018.

For now, Cox sits in a maximum-security prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, awaiting resentencing in his federal criminal case in Alaska.

Along with the suit against Rensel and the onetime board of 鈥淔ree Schaeffer Cox,鈥 he鈥檚 sued the confidential informant the government used in the criminal case.

That lawsuit, against William Fulton and Dallas-based Benbella Books, is pending in federal court.

Much like Cox鈥檚 criminal case, there鈥檚 no court date set in the lawsuit over the book.

Photo illustration by 人兽性交

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