December 3, 2003 - South Bend Tribune (IN)
Family Files Lawsuit in Rainbow Death
Rohm's Shooting Called 'Hate Crime'
By Adam Jackson, Tribune Staff Writer
Authorities say 28-year-old Rolland Rohm signed his own death
warrant when he pointed a gun at an armored vehicle full of police
officers. Rohm's family says the authorities are blatantly lying.
And this week, the family of the slain pro-marijuana activist
filed a civil lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Detroit alleging
that Rohm, known as Rollie to his friends, was wrongfully killed
during a police standoff at the Rainbow Farm Campground during
Labor Day weekend 2001 -- and that investigators conspired to
cover it up.
"This was murder, pure and simple," Rohm's stepfather,
John Livermore, said. "It was a hate crime."
Rohm's death came at the end of a five-day police standoff
at the campground, which kicked off when Rohm and his partner,
46-year-old Grover "Tom" Crosslin, barricaded themselves
in a farmhouse on the campground property after torching several
buildings on the property.
The men were reportedly upset about court proceedings in which
Crosslin was facing possible prison time and Rohm had had his
son, Robert, 12, removed from his home and placed in state foster
care.
While police received tips from neighbors that the men were
armed, a crew from WNDU-TV, Channel 16, South Bend, covering
the fires in a helicopter, were reportedly fired upon from the
ground. Because firing at an aircraft is a federal offense, FBI
teams were soon on scene, along with the local and state police
agencies responding.
Those FBI agents proved to be Crosslin's undoing on Sept.
3, 2001, when he and a friend, Brandon Peoples, encountered FBI
sharpshooters in the woods near the home. Police reports indicate
that Crosslin raised his Ruger Mini-14 rifle in the direction
of one of the snipers, causing others in the area to shoot him
immediately.
But Rohm was still alive in the barricaded farmhouse. After
friends and family members pleaded with him to turn himself in
all through the night, he finally agreed, but said he needed
some sleep before doing so.
Rohm, however, never turned himself in. When flames erupted
from the farmhouse early on the morning of Sept. 4, police moved
in to prevent his escape, with one team using a tanklike Light
Armored Vehicle to move around one side of the house.
And it was at that vehicle that authorities say Rohm aimed
his rifle while he knelt next to a small pine tree, causing the
Michigan State Police sharpshooters to kill him.
Not so, Livermore said.
"Neither of the autopsies agree with what is in the reports,"
he said. "There is no way he was pointing a gun at them."
The lawsuit, in which Rohm's estate is listed as plaintiff,
names as defendants Daniel Lubelan, John Julin, Jerry Ellsworth,
Steve Homrich, David Bower, Joseph Zangaro, Joe Jones and Dave
Rampy.
While police reports list Lubelan and Julin as the triggermen,
all eight men were members of a Michigan State Police team who
were maintaining a perimeter around the farmhouse at the time
of the killing.
A spokeswoman for the Michigan State Police said the agency
maintains a policy of not commenting on matters involving pending
litigation.
Scott Teter, then the Cass County prosecutor, did not file
charges in the deaths. He said his investigation showed conclusively
that the deaths of both men were justifiable homicides under
Michigan law.
Dearborn, Mich., attorney Christopher Keane, who is representing
the Livermore family, said they have been gathering information
in preparation for the lawsuit for more than a year.
"We have a very strong case," Keane said. "The
only justification for a shooting like this is if someone is
in imminent danger."
"No one was in imminent danger" from Rohm, he said.
Should the Livermores win the civil case, they could receive
monetary compensation, in which case John Livermore said the
vast majority would go to Robert Rohm, who has lived with other
relatives since the loss of his father.
But Livermore said he and his family are looking for something
besides money in the case: They want answers. Answers about inconsistencies
they believe are in the published police reports about the killing.
Answers about disturbing discoveries they say they have made,
such as the slain man's testicles disappearing some time during
the police investigations.
And answers about why Rohm was killed in the first place,
if, as they believe, he was not threatening the police in any
way.
"We want the truth, and we want what is right for (Robert),"
Livermore said. "There are a lot of things about this that
don't add up."
No court dates have been set for the case.
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