Man Gets at Least 65 Years in Michigan Soldier’s Slaying

The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
September 24, 2019US News
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Man Gets at Least 65 Years in Michigan Soldier’s Slaying
Jeremy Cuellar, center, appears for a preliminary exam on a charge of first-degree premeditated murder at the Berrien County Courthouse in St. Joseph, Michigan, in a file photo. (Joel Bissell/Kalamazoo Gazette via AP, File)

ST. JOSEPH, Mich.—A man who pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the slaying of a U.S. Army sergeant from Michigan has been sentenced to at least 65 years in prison.

Jeremy Cuellar was sentenced Monday, Sept. 23 after earlier admitting to being a co-conspirator with Kemia Hassel in the New Year’s Eve 2018 death of her husband, 23-year-old Sgt. Tyrone Hassel III.

Kemia Hassel (left) and Jeremy Cuellar
Kemia Hassel (left) and Jeremy Cuellar. (Berrien County Sheriff’s Department)

Cuellar apologized in court to Tyrone Hassel’s family, saying he was “a fool.”

Tyrone Hassel was fatally shot in an ambush while visiting family in southwestern Michigan. Kemia Hassel was earlier convicted of first-degree murder and is serving a life sentence.

Kemia Hassel and Cuellar reportedly were lovers and plotted the murder to collect Army death benefits and life insurance money. All three were soldiers stationed at Fort Stewart in Georgia.

US Soldier Arrested After Allegedly Discussing Bombing News Network

A U.S. Army soldier discussed bomb-making techniques and bombing a major American news network’s headquarters, and named presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke as a possible target before being arrested this weekend, according to court documents released on Monday.

Jarrett William Smith, 24, was charged with distribution of information related to weapons of mass destruction after offering to teach others bomb-making and discussing bombing the news network’s headquarters, according to documents in Kansas federal court. He was stationed at Fort Riley in Kansas before his arrest on Saturday. The arrest of Smith comes amid a wave of arrests and charges the Justice Department has made disrupting possible domestic terror plots.

Smith allegedly discussed with a confidential source to the FBI that “the headquarters of a major American news network would be a suggested target, utilizing a vehicle bomb,” an FBI agent wrote in court papers.

FBI
The FBI seal is seen outside the headquarters building in Washington on July 5, 2016. (Yuri Gripas/AFP/Getty Images)

Two sources familiar with the matter say the network Smith discussed targeting with a vehicle bomb was CNN.

CNN President and chairman of WarnerMedia News and Sports Jeff Zucker said in a message to employees that there was no imminent threat to the organization.

“I want to assure everyone that there was never any imminent threat to any CNN locations,” he said in an email. “We continue to actively monitor these issues on a daily basis and work closely with our security teams around the world and our partners in law enforcement.”

Smith made an initial appearance in Kansas federal court Monday afternoon. He is scheduled to appear again in federal court for a detention hearing on Thursday in Topeka. Smith’s attorney did not immediately return a request for comment.

According to court documents, Smith also mentioned O’Rourke, a former Texas congressman and presidential candidate, in a chat with an undercover FBI agent on Sept. 20. The undercover agent had told Smith he was looking to target a politician, and Smith responded with instructions on making a bomb or grenade.

“You got anyone down in Texas that would be a good fit for fire, destruction and death?” the undercover agent said to him. “Outside of Beto? I don’t know enough people that would be relevant enough to cause a change if they died,” Smith replied. The FBI had begun tracking Smith in March, who had been stationed in Texas since 2017. He was transferred to Fort Riley in July.

O’Rourke campaign spokeswoman Aleigha Cavalier thanked the FBI for their work in the case.

“We take any threat like this very seriously, and our team is in direct contact with the FBI regarding this case,” she said. “This isn’t about any one person or one campaign, and we won’t let this scare us or cause us to back down in fighting for what’s right.”

Smith had discussed as early as 2016 joining a far-right paramilitary group in Ukraine before he became a U.S. Army soldier in 2017. He then bragged in a Facebook chat about being able to build explosives “in the style of the Afghans,” the court filings said.

Then, about a month ago, Smith started speaking to the FBI’s confidential source and an undercover federal agent. He discussed in an online chat group plotting an attack in the United States, said he was looking for other “radicals,” and suggested targeting the leftist group Antifa, cell towers, and a local news station, authorities allege. Separately, Smith suggested a vehicle bomb could be used to target “the headquarters of a major American news network,” and gave advice on building explosives.

Army Lt. Col. Terence Kelley, the director of public affairs for the 1st Infantry Division in Kansas, confirmed Smith is an active duty soldier. He said the Army cooperated with the FBI in its investigation.

“These allegations violate our Army Values so we take them very seriously,” Kelley said in the statement. “Our law enforcement team cooperated with the FBI on his arrest over the weekend.”

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